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Month: April 2011

Drowning in BS: the journalist who had no shame

Drowning In BullshitLink

by digby

This is interesting:

James B. Stewart made an appearance on the Today show this morning talking about the most famous cases of perjury that he’s written about in his new book “Tangled Webs: How American Society Is Drowning In Lies.”

What “Tangled Webs” examines is people at the pinnacle of their professions–Martha Stewart, Barry Bonds, Scooter Libby, people from Wall Street right up to the White House–“brazenly lying.” They’re role models, and their behavior trickles down to society. “Why do they lie,” asks Stewart? “Because they think they can get away with it.”
[…]
While James Stewart says there are no statistics showing an increase of lying, he feels it’s an epidemic, happening at the highest levels and that as a society we’ve become too tolerant of lying in our homes and in the world. When you take an oath, you must tell the truth: “Our justice system depends on it.”

Fascinating. And where do you suppose this all this lying started?

Maybe it was here:

The manifest failure of the month long assault on Hillary Clinton to yield evidence of wrongdoing was not ignored everywhere. New York Times columnist Anthony Lewis became the first important voice at his newspaper to break ranks. “Three years and innumerable investigations later,” he wrote on January 15th, “Mrs Clinton has not been shown to have done anything wrong in Whitewater. One charge after another has evaporated.”

Lewis compared D’Amato’s performance to that of Senator Joseph R McCarthy during the anti-communist witch hunts of fifties. But Lewis noted one major difference. “On Whitewater the press seemed all too eager an accomplice of the accusers…

Still other celebrated journalists continued to predict the first lady’s probable indictment as the election year began, most notably Pulitzer Prize winning author James B Stewart. Published by Simon and Shuster in 1996 to the accompaniment of a multimedia publicity campaign, Stewart’s book Blood Sport claims to be the inside story of “the president and first lady as they really are.” Set forth as a sweeping narrative, it includes dramatized scenes and imaginary dialog purporting to represent the innermost thoughts of individuals whom the author had in some cases never met, much less interviewed.

“Scenes that Mr Stewart could never have observed first hand,” complained New York Times reviewer Michiko Kakutani, “are recounted from an omniscient viewpoint. Mr. Stewart rarely identifies the sources for such scenes not does he take into account the subjectivity and oftens self-serving nature of memory. The reader never knows whether the quotes Mr Stewart puts into the mouth of an individual… are from a first or second hand source.” — The Hunting of the President, Conason and Lyons

You have to read the book for the full catalog of mistakes, errors of omission and downright lies in that hideous book. The idea that this guy is now rending his garments about Americans being a land of lies is pretty amazing. I guess he thinks he can “get away with it.”

Rick Perlstein has coined a phrase “mendocracy” to describe how our elites have completely disavowed the very notion of honesty, even in fields like business and economics where one would assume that an agreement on the basic facts would be necessary to function. James B. Stewart is the walking proof of its existence.

h/t to bz

The tea party sounds the alarm — ACORN is going to steal the election

The Tea Party sounds the alarm

by digby

In my email this morning:

Watch for Obama to “Steal” the 2012 Election

Obama, Holder, and their entire illicit crews should all be in prison. They are all criminals. Obama will receive at least $1 billion and possibly up to $2 billion from George Soros, foreign communist countries, and other criminal organizations to “buy” the election.

There definitely will be voter fraud going on throughout the 50 states but definitely to the greatest degree in “battleground states.” Watch for ballot box stuffing, phony votes, “fixing” of voting machines, voting illegal aliens, voter intimidation, and union thuggery going on before and on November 6, 2012.

We must keep a jaundiced eye on ACORN, The New Black Panthers, SEIU, and other such criminal organizations to implement Obama’s plan again to “steal” this election.

These criminals do not believe in freedom, liberty, and the American way of life. Harry Reid allegedly stole the 2010 senate election through voter fraud. Expect the worst in the 2012 election because it will happen. Remember, we are dealing with criminals bereft of any honesty or integrity. Vigilance!

They’re really working themselves up. There’s this too:

HOW IS RACIST BARACK OBAMA, WHO MAY NOT BE AN AMERICAN BORN CITIZEN, AND ERIC HOLDER, ANOTHER RACISTS, WHO HAS DISGRACED THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT, GET AWAY WITH BREAKING THESE CIVIL RIGHTS LAWS?

WHAT ABOUT THEIR TIES TO ACORN?

In Nevada, former Acorn executive Amy Busefink was convicted of voter fraud. In 2008, Acorn submitted 400,000 fraudulent voter applications in Nevada. Nevada only has a population of 2.6 million. That includes children, illegals and those who cannot vote. The real number of voters is substantially less than 2.6 million. Imagine what 400,000 fraudulent votes could do to an election?

400,000 was just the fraudulent voter registrations that were discovered. A close friend of Tea Party Nation recently told us, “In 2010, the left was test marketing a variety of voter fraud techniques. In 2012, they will use them everywhere to try and steal the election.”

We cannot allow the election to be stolen. We are fighting back. On February 4-5 a special event will be held to help fight back against voter fraud.

What is the event? Read about it on Tea Party Nation.

Tea Party Nation founder Judson Phillips announced earlier that “voter fraud” was going to be their main issue going into 2012 and it’s looking like he’s being true to his promise.

*I’ve been getting a lot of stuff about Holder and Obama being racists lately, having something to do with an African coup and the new black panthers. Who knew?

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Trump chumps

Trump Chumps

by digby

I have been trying to avoid the silly Trump mania, but when I see something like this I just have to groan:


Really? We’re going to start comparing this blow-dried media whore to the president? “Which one handles the press better?” “Which one is more fun?”

It’s not enough that they are validating this Birther crap by letting this clown dominate the airwaves for weeks on end. Now they’re going to compare his relationship with the media to the president of the United States. A president who got “testy” by the way when he got asked ikf he was born in Kenya.

I agree that this is likely to blow back on the Republicans over time as this looney tune drives all the GOP presidential contenders further over the cliff. But in the meantime, they have mainstreamed this idiotic Birther nonsense to such a degree that it’s now become a “smell test” issue for the sizeable minority of people who are unhappy with government and don’t pay attention to the details. All they know is that it’s a “controversy” and since there is one, you have to wonder why the president hasn’t put it to rest. They’ll never know that it’s a pack of totally illogical lies.

We watched this unfold in the 90s when every batshit rumor emanating from an Arkansas bait shop was given an airing and it didn’t matter over the long haul that they were all eventually proven wrong because the damage had already been done. It’s toxic and the media should have to answer for when they inject this poison into the body politic.

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Durbin’s Big Assignment

Durbin’s Big Assignment

by digby

There’s a lot of chatter today about Dick Durbin’s insistence (along with Mark Warner’s) on injecting Social Security into the debt debate even though it contributes nothing to the debt. (Howie had a particularly pungent response .)

But here’s the thing. Ever since Durbin voted for the Catfood Commision report last December, it’s been clear that he was going to be the designated “liberal” to validate this position. Last February, the Wall Street Journal reported on an early deficit meeting among the Senate Dems, in which it was clear that Social security was going to be used as a political football:

Top Senate Democrats tried to scotch efforts by Majority Whip Richard Durbin to include Social Security in comprehensive deficit-reduction negotiations, illustrating the challenge facing the bipartisan talks.

The discussion occurred during a closed-door White House meeting this week among negotiators including Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada and Sen. Charles Schumer of New York, a key lieutenant.

President Barack Obama attended, although his contribution to the conversation couldn’t be learned. Previously, the administration has offered general support for bipartisan debt-reduction talks.

The confrontation, as well as a flare-up on the right over taxes, illustrates the difficulty of reaching a deal on deficit-control legislation, and how fear of upsetting the party line on particular policies could trump the issue of controlling the debt.
[…]
Democratic interest groups have been gearing up for a fight on Social Security, and Messrs. Schumer and Reid don’t want to get in the way. On Friday, Edward Coyle, executive director of the liberal Alliance for Retired Americans, accused House Republicans of threatening Social Security with the spending cuts they are pressing for the current fiscal year. But negotiators appear to be holding firm.

“If Sen. Schumer is serious about fighting to protect Social Security from harmful cuts, he can join the large group of Members already doing that,” said a Senate official involved in the bipartisan negotiations. “But if he’s trying to use Social Security as an excuse to do nothing to reduce the deficit, he’s going to be pretty lonely.”

A spokesman for Mr. Schumer, Brian Fallon, said the senator “believes it is vital to rein in the deficit, but Social Security is not the nub of the problem, and focusing on it distracts from any serious effort to bring the budget into balance.”

The White House meeting Wednesday took place before The Wall Street Journal published an article Thursday detailing the Senate negotiations. The substance of the talks somewhat eased the concern of the Democratic leaders about Social Security, and gave Sen. Durbin some room to press forward, though without any commitment of support.

Aides familiar with the talks say Democratic leaders are willing to let them play out. A framework for deficit-cutting legislation could be circulated to a broader group of senators when they return early next month after a Presidents Day recess.

According to aides familiar with the bipartisan talks, Social Security is being treated gingerly. Under one proposal, lawmakers would be given two years to draft an overhaul to put the system on sounder financial footing. If that effort fails, Congress would be required to vote on the presidential debt commission’s Social Security plan, which would raise the amount of income subject to Social Security taxes, gradually raise the retirement age and slow the annual growth of benefits.

Obviously, I don’t know the status of these various proposals today, but it’s clear that one way or the other Social Security is going to be used as a bargaining chip in the coming negotiations. Durbin’s job is to keep it on the table. And he is widely seen to be Obama’s proxy in the Senate, so I imagine most people believe this has the president’s blessing. (The fact that other proxies say the same thing, is also a clue.)

I’m increasingly wondering if the intention here is to keep Social Security on the table for the express purpose of allowing Obama to save it. (The fact that Ryan’s plan didn’t include it makes that possible.) Let’s hope so anyway. Messing with it in this environment is bad on the merits and bad on the politics. But either way, it will keep the activist base scrambling for months spending huge amounts of energy to ensure that it doesn’t get cut (which will have the salutary effect of keeping us from organizing on anything else.) And in the end, if the president saves it, we will be genuinely grateful and relieved. Sounds like a plan.

The only problem is that these negotiations tend to take on a life of their own and you never know exactly how they’re going to come out. Moreover, it raises another question: what would the Republicans get in return?

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Debt Ceiling: The Musical

Debt Ceiling: The Musical

by digby

OMG! The sky is falling! At least according to Contessa Brewer and Melissa Francis on MSNBC, S&P issuing a warning that it might lower its outlook yesterday is the single greatest blow to American security since 9/11. Or something. Whatever it was, it was very, very, very important.

Except, you know, it wasn’t. It was bullshit. The S&P has, at best, what you might call a spotty record when it comes to forecasting, seeing as it missed that little mortgage blip completely — something which they are actually counted upon to do. But more importantly, as James Fallows points out here, they are making a political forecast, not an economic one and it’s one that nobody needs S&P to make, so this “warning” is essentially meaningless. If the markets are so dumb that they need someone to point out that there’s a big argument going on about the debt then I think we have much bigger problems.

Moreover, dday may be the only person in the nation who noticed this:

Moody’s threatened a credit downgrade in March 2010. It just so happened the political world was busy at that time waiting to see if Congress would pass the health care bill. Moody’s actually continued to make these threats for the better part of a year. So chalk up the interest in S&P to a) a slow news day, and b) a newfound concern with deficits in Washington. After all, the President just made a speech about it!

Judging by the media reaction, that’s exactly the case. They are in the midst of a swoon I haven’t seen since Lehman went under. Unfortunately, that was real and this isn’t.

Dday also asks why S&P bothered with such an obvious observation and points to this article by Dean Baker, who wonders if S&P might just be angling for a payoff, something that shouldn’t surprise anyone considering the behavior of all the big financial players over the last few years.

That certainly might be true. But I’m actually leaning more to the idea that the main reason is political rather than financial. I suspect they are playing their designated role in this spring’s runaway hit, “Debt Ceiling: the Musical” a madcap Village romp in which everyone pretends they believe things they don’t believe resulting in much confusion and wacky misunderstandings until the end where it turns out they were after the same things all along: huge spending cuts.

There are some tells:

The Obama administration is trying to enlist Wall Street executives in the debate over increasing the debt ceiling and convince congressional Republicans that a US default would be catastrophic for markets.Tim Geithner, US Treasury secretary, has been leading the campaign for the White House, urging executives such as Vikram Pandit of Citigroup, Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan and Brian Moynihan of Bank of America, as well as top insurance industry executives, to point out the dangers of “walking up to the brink” on debt, according to an administration official.

Now it’s possible that S&P was just doing its own thing and that it’s completely unaffiliated with Wall Street’s little performance on behalf of the Treasury, but let’s just say it’s a very big coincidence.

Unfortunately, for those of us who fear this debt ceiling “debate” is going to result in yet more draconian cuts, the White House and GOP response to S&Ps announcement is not reassuring. The Republicans came charging out of the gate demanding more spending cuts and tying them directly to the debt ceiling. The White House, by contrast, issued a very tepid response saying they are sure that the two sides will be able to work together to solve the debt crisis. I don’t think you need to be Machiavelli to where this is going. Neither do you have to be a mind-reader to suspect that this is all playing out for a common purpose.

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Eric Foner’s The Fiery Trial

by tristero

Eric Foner, author of The Fiery Trial, won the Pulitzer yesterday, something so incredibly well-deserved it would have been a crime against the genre of non-fiction if it hadn’t happened. The Fiery Trial transformed my ideas about what was important about that war. I can’t recommend it more highly for anyone even remotely interested either in the period or for insight into some of the main reasons this country is moving in such ominous directions today – and what to do about it.

The Fiery Trial is a “biography” of Lincoln’s changing views on slavery, on what Lincoln believed, how he and other Americans acted, and on how the momentous events of the Civil War caused both Lincoln and the Union to become ever more focused and committed to the most radical of radical ideas of the time: not only the freeing of all black men, women, and children “held to labor” but also the conferring upon them of equal rights as citizens of the United States, including the right to vote (for men; unfortunately, women’s suffrage would have to wait for the future). In part, Foner’s book seems to be a response to various revisionist historians of Lincoln and the period, for example Lerone Bennett’s Forced Into Glory which argued that Lincoln was in fact little different either in attitude or actions than other racists of that time (and now). Foner does not directly answer Bennett’s charge that Lincoln was a white supremacist; instead, he tells us, in meticulously fascinating detail, what Lincoln wrote, what he said, and what he did. Foner also describes, in equally absorbing detail, the (usually deplorable) racial attitudes of the United States in the first half of the 19th Century. It becomes quite clear that Lincoln’s fairly mainstream views changed in many ways, both significant and subtle, during the years before he became president and then changed dramatically as his presidency unfolded. Foner’s object is not to exonerate Lincoln of the charge of racism and indeed, the Lincoln that emerges from his book is sometimes dismayingly, inexcusably, on the wrong side of the issue, both rhetorically and politically. Indeed, the character of Foner’s Lincoln is exceedingly complex, much darker and far less consistent than the hagiographies. This Lincoln sometimes becomes deeply irritated, even angry when abolitionists bother him with what he considers trivial issues – such as what to do about the education of young freed slaves. And, of course, there is his twin obsessions with “gradual emancipation” – an oxymoron if ever there was one – and “colonization,” which five minutes of serious thought would easily make clear to anyone that it could never happen, or at least not without a bloodbath that would make an “ethnic cleansing” seem downright antiseptic by comparison.

Foner’s emphasis is on Lincoln’s capacity to change, not only by focusing his mind more carefully on the legal and political issues of the time – and the Lincoln that we encounter in these pages is a true master of both – but also on a personal analysis of what his moral positions imply in terms of political action. Whether Foner intended it or not, I sensed that his Lincoln moved from being an essentially political man, who identified slavery as a major issue upon which he could build a career, to a moral leader who believed that he had a central role – but not a supreme role, in the sense of a dictator – to play in the task of freeing America’s enslaved blacks. The “gradual emancipation” Lincoln urged on the country was in fact his own, a gradual freeing of himself to act in increasing accord with the most “radical” abolitionists, but to do so always with extreme care. If this view of Lincoln is accurate, and for whatever little it’s worth, I think it is, it is still quite possible to brand Lincoln as a white supremacist, or a reactionary, or a ditherer, or many other things. The question is whether those charges are useful in understanding the unbelievably complex situation a man of Lincoln’s milieu faced back then, the options he considered practical, and the character of “the “animal himself” who Foner at the end of the book contrasts with his odious, thoroughly racist successor, Andrew Johnson.

The standard response to Bennett’s charge that Lincoln was a racist who reluctantly was forced into abolitionism – which Bennett asserts was the only moral position to take towards the evil of slavery – goes something like this: “That all may be true, but no abolitionist would have been elected in 1860. Lincoln, whatever his faults, did far more than any abolitionist could dream of doing, simply because his views, as disgraceful and wrong as they seem to us now, made him electable.”

Foner, carefully, and rather quietly, dismantles this argument. It is clear, after reading Foner’s book, that when he was elected, Lincoln was nothing remotely close to a stealth abolitionist. He was a career politician who, while surely sincere in his hatred of slavery, was not interested in abolishing it. He was focused primarily on two things: preserving the Union which meant, among other things, not extending slavery to the territories; and a career in politics in the upper echelons of the newly formed Republican party. In fact, Foner argues, the slaves, via their actions to free themselves; the military commanders who, under tremendous pressure, often hastily freed the slaves they encountered; and the abolitionists in their daily politicking in Washington and in the Northern press, created a cultural/political climate that all but forced Lincoln to probe far more carefully into the consequences of his somewhat jerry-rigged, contradictory, and essentially conventional moral opposition to slavery. It is to Lincoln’s credit that he proceeded to clarify, refine, and alter his ideas. Also, Lincoln was forced to consider equally carefully what he could and couldn’t do both within the political climate and, ultimately, within the United States’s legal framework. What emerges is a dynamic and surprisingly unpredictable picture of Lincoln acting within and on events, sometimes incredibly badly, often amazingly well. It makes for a very exciting read.

It would be a mistake to ignore Foner’s clear intent here, ie, his recasting of the relationship between a radical movement and a moderate/conservative president. Without saying so directly his obvious point is that if today’s “radicals” – who, like the radicals of the 1850’s, are not radical at all but merely sensible liberals – wish to transform the country and increase rather than restrict the growth of freedom, the potential is there. But it will require ceaseless agitation of our most “radical” positions – single payer, for example, which of course is hardly radical – in order to move the discourse in the direction we want. There is little to be gained in the current situation from the kinds of compromises we’ve recently seen because, as in Lincoln’s time, the crucial actions that move the country towards progressive goals lies at least as much in the activity of those who steer the political discourse as in the president. (It is eerie, by the way, to meet in Lincoln’s time many of the same arguments and same smears that are being deployed today – against Massachusetts, for example.)

This is certainly not a new notion, but to see it so clearly being played out within the context of Lincoln and the Civil War is one of the great pleasure of this remarkable, essential, instant classic of American history. I’m no expert as I’ve only read some 15 or 20 books on Lincoln and the Civil War in my life. But I can safely say that there few books out there that I’ve encountered on any subject that are so rich in detail and yet remain so thrilling, so pleasurable, and finally so profoundly transformative of the meanings of events I thought I understood fairly well but now realize hold far more potential for study and focused action than I thought.

I can’t urge you strongly enough to read The Fiery Trial.

Achilles Heels

Achilles Heels

by digby

Republicans are usually pretty good at politics, at least compared to Democrats, but they have one serious political weakness that they just can’t seem to reckon with. John Boehner has declined to host the capitol’s annual Cinco de Mayo celebration insulting to the the fastest growing ethic demographic in the country.

And they are very well aware of it.

Give Bush and Rove credit for at least seeing the writing on the wall. The far right Republicans are blind to the consequences of this.

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Who needs Republicans?

Who Needs Republicans?

by digby

If any of you still wonder why these Democrats drive the activist base to distraction, here’s the perfect example. dday reports:

http://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gif
Anyone who thinks that Democrats have suddenly got religion on revenues and the need for tax hikes on the rich (or simply to let the Bush tax cuts expire entirely) should take a look at the Tax Day press release I just got from the Senate Dems. Here’s the headline:

“FACT SHEET: DEMOCRATS HAVE PASSED $1.5 TRILLION IN TAX CUTS SINCE 2007″

Here’s the subhed:

“Americans’ Tax Burden Is At Its Lowest In 60 Years”

Here’s the first line of the release:

“Democrats know that one of the best ways to help our economy recover is to reduce the taxes that families and businesses pay each year.”

The rest of the release denotes all of the tax cuts Senate Democrats have passed since January 2007, and it’s a pretty accurate list.

Perhaps, you say, they’re just rebutting the “tax and spend liberal” label and doing so effectively. But if you think this is the crew that’s going to pick a fight on taxes, even for the rich, I think this release puts that to bed.

Sure does.

Once again the Democrats are trying mightily to convince the American people that they aren’t the same old taxnspend/socialist/liberal/commies they are always accused of being. But it won’t work. If a Democratic president balancing the budget and leaving a surplusdidn’t do it, then this certainlyu won’t. And the irony is that they are telling the truth. They really do prefer tax and spending cuts and nobody believes it.

Maybe they should try making a case for active, responsive government for a change and see if that might work better. Of course, they would have to act like they believe it and I’m fairly sure that a good many of them can’t pull it off.

Update: In light of the phony baloney S&P downgrade today and the predictable GOP response, Dave Weigel says the Democrats are bad at politics because they aren’t touting their latest pledge to let the Bush tax cuts expire as part of the debt ceiling negotiations. One might think so, except it would step on their victory lap as the greatest tax cutters in history.

And I’m fairly sure that allowing the Bush tax cuts to expire has to be saved as a big 2012 campaign issue for both sides. They don’t expire until after the election, so there’s lots of political mileage left in them. And it worked out so well the last time.

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More on tolerance: “tooth and nail, might and main”

More on tolerance: “tooth and nail, might and main”

by digby

Following up on Sally Kohn’s piece yesterday, which I wrote about here, my friend Debra reminded me of this piece, which I wrote back in 2004. Sadly, things have actually gotten worse since then:

Tooth And Nail, Might And Main

As we think about the relentlessness of the Republican machine and its propensity for playing hardball, it pays sometimes to remember that their ruthless tactics are actually a matter of temperament rather than ideology. Conservatives have always been this way. The problem today is that they are operating with a radical agenda, an incompetent president and a country with much too much power to be allowed to run wild with either.

This interesting post from Steamboats Are Ruining Everything takes us back to 1820 and reminds us that brutish conservatives are nothing new:

William Hazlitt explained the nature of it in his 1820 essay, “On the Spirit of Partisanship.”

Conservatives and liberals play the game of politics differently, Hazlitt wrote, because they have different motivations. Liberals are motivated by principles and tend to believe that personal honor can be spared in political combat. They may, in fact, become vain about their highmindedness. Hazlitt condemns the mildness as a mistake, both in moral reasoning and in political strategy. “They betray the cause by not defending it as it is attacked, tooth and nail, might and main, without exception and without remorse.”

The conservatives, on the other hand, start with a personal interest in the conflict. Not wishing to lose their hold on power, they are fiercer. “We”—i.e., the liberals, or the “popular cause,” in Hazlitt’s terminology—“stand in awe of their threats, because in the absence of passion we are tender of our persons.

They beat us in courage and in intellect, because we have nothing but the common good to sharpen our faculties or goad our will; they have no less an alternative in view than to be uncontrolled masters of mankind or to be hurled from high—

“To grinning scorn a sacrifice,
And endless infamy!”

They do not celebrate the triumphs of their enemies as their own: it is with them a more feeling disputation. They never give an inch of ground that they can keep; they keep all that they can get; they make no concessions that can redound to their own discredit; they assume all that makes for them; if they pause it is to gain time; if they offer terms it is to break them: they keep no faith with enemies: if you relax in your exertions, they persevere the more: if you make new efforts, they redouble theirs. While they give no quarter, you stand upon mere ceremony. While they are cutting your throat, or putting the gag in your mouth, you talk of nothing but liberality, freedom of inquiry, and douce humanité. Their object is to destroy you, your object is to spare them—to treat them according to your own fancied dignity. They have sense and spirit enough to take all advantages that will further their cause: you have pedantry and pusillanimity enough to undertake the defence of yours, in order to defeat it. It is the difference between the efficient and the inefficient; and this again resolves itself into the difference between a speculative proposition and a practical interest.

It is not fair play, and Hazlitt thinks that liberals who decline to fight fire with fire are fools. “It might as well be said that a man has a right to knock me on the head on the highway, and that I am only to use mildness and persuasion in return, as best suited to the justice of my cause; as that I am not to retaliate and make reprisal on the common enemies of mankind in their own style and mode of execution.”

Hazlitt was right. And never more than today when the stakes are so high.

As I said, we have been fighting this beast forever. Conservatives are just more inclined to fight and more serious about winning. But, I have seen the Republican agenda change from conservative to radical in the last 30 years and their candidates from steady, stolid leaders to firebrands and incompetents. America is the most powerful nation on earth. If the modern GOP boasted prudent, tested leadership and a simple desire to avoid radical change, I would still oppose them but I would not be worried. But, these people want to wildly experiment on a global scale and their track record of the last three years is devastating. History proves that bad things do sometimes happen. Being barely left standing to say “I told you so” will be no compensation.

h/t to K Geier for the link.

* It should be noted progress does happen, so it can’t be that liberalism never prevails. But there’s often a backlash and so it’s always two steps forward one step back. And the step back can be a doozy.

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