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Month: September 2011

Trouble in Bachmann Land by David Atkins

Trouble in Bachmann Land
by David Atkins (“thereisnospoon”)

Not good news for Michele Bachmann:

Ed Rollins, the veteran campaign operative who helped engineer an Iowa straw poll victory for Representative Michele Bachmann this summer, has stepped down from running the day-to-day operations of her presidential campaign, a spokeswoman for Mrs. Bachmann said Monday night…

Politico reported the change in Mr. Rollins’s role. The Web site also reported on Monday night that Mr. Rollins’s deputy, David Polyansky, would leave the campaign. “I wish Michele nothing but the best, and anyone who underestimates her as a candidate does so at their own peril,” Mr. Polyansky told Politico.

The change in roles for Mr. Rollins came on a day he was quoted in The Washington Post as expressing pessimism about Mrs. Bachmann’s campaign. “The Perry-Romney race is now the story, with us the third candidate,” Mr. Rollins said.

The moves raise questions about the future of Mrs. Bachmann’s campaign. After winning the straw poll in August, Mrs. Bachmann, of Minnesota, has struggled to maintain momentum, especially after Gov. Rick Perry of Texas entered the Republican contest.

Of course, let’s not forget that many prognosticators like myself were foolishly writing off John McCain’s chances in 2007. This horse race will bounce around and around for a while. Perry is big news today, but if Palin jumps in, Perry will be as yesterday’s news as Bachmann.

Personally, I expect Romney to be the nominee in spite of it all. The GOP made a fool of me and my predictions in 2004 1996 when I assumed that Bob Dole was too boring for GOP primary voters, and again in 2008 when I wrote off John McCain for his stance on immigration. The GOP has always gone with the candidate who was “next in line,” which would mean Romney this time.

Most of the rest of the field will turn their sights on Perry as the biggest threat, and the wingnut vote furious with and distrustful of Romney will split their votes.

The only thing that would cost Romney the nomination, in my mind, would be if GOP voters really are more prejudiced against a Mormon candidate than they let on, in a sort of religious Bradley effect.

Time will tell.

Meanwhile, in Bizarroworld

Meanwhile, in Bizarroworld


by digby

… also known as Forbes.com on “Obama, Hitler and exploding the biggest lie in history”:

In Argentina, everyone acknowledges that fascism, state capitalism, corporatism – whatever – reflects very leftwing ideology. Eva Peron remains a liberal icon. President Obama’s Fabian policies (Keynesian economics) promise similar ends. His proposed infrastructure bank is just the latest gyration of corporatism. Why then are fascists consistently portrayed as conservatives?
[…]
On many issues the Nazis align quite agreeably with liberals. The Nazis enforced strict gun control, which made their agenda possible and highlights the necessity of an armed populace.

The Nazis separated church and state to marginalize religion’s influence. Hitler despised biblical morality and bourgeois (middle class) values. Crosses were ripped from the public square in favor of swastikas. Prayer in school was abolished and worship confined to churches. Church youth groups were forcibly absorbed into the Hitler Youth.

Hitler extolled public education, even banning private schools and instituting “a fundamental reconstruction of our whole national education program” controlled by Berlin. Similar to liberals’ cradle to career ideal, the Nazis established state administered early childhood development programs; “The comprehension of the concept of the State must be striven for by the school as early as the beginning of understanding.”

Foreshadowing Michelle Obama, “The State is to care for elevating national health.” Nanny State intrusions reflect that persons are not sovereign, but belong to the state. Hitler even sought to outlaw meat after the war; blaming Germany’s health problems on the capitalist (i.e. Jewish) food industry. The Nazis idealized public service and smothered private charity with public programs.

Hitler’s election platform included “an expansion on a large scale of old age welfare.” Nazi propaganda proclaimed, “No one shall go hungry! No one shall be cold!” Germany had universal healthcare and demanded that “the state be charged first with providing the opportunity for a livelihood.” Obama would relish such a “jobs” program.

Nazi Germany was the fullest culmination of Margaret Sanger’s eugenic vision. She was the founder of Planned Parenthood, which changed its name from the American Birth Control Society after the holocaust surfaced. Although Nazi eugenics clearly differed from liberals’ abortion arguments today, that wasn’t necessarily true for their progressive forbears.

Germany was first to enact environmentalist economic policies promoting sustainable development and regulating pollution. The Nazis bought into Rousseau’s romanticized primitive man fantasies. Living “authentically” in environs unspoiled by capitalist industry was almost as cherished as pure Aryan lineage.

National Socialist economics were socialist, obviously, imposing top-down economic planning and social engineering. It was predicated on volkisch populism combining a Malthusian struggle for existence with a fetish for the “organic.” Like most socialists, wealth was thought static and “the common good supersede[d] the private good” in a Darwinist search for “applied biology” to boost greater Germany.

The Nazis distrusted markets and abused property rights, even advocating “confiscation of war profits” and “nationalization of associated industries.” Their platform demanded, “Communalization of the great warehouses” (department stores) and presaging modern set aside quotas on account of race or politics, “utmost consideration of all small firms in contracts with the State.”

Nazi Germany progressively dominated her economy. Although many businesses were nominally private, the state determined what was produced in what quantities and at what prices. First, they unleashed massive inflation to finance their prolific spending on public works, welfare and military rearmament. They then enforced price and wage controls to mask currency debasement’s harmful impact. This spawned shortages as it must, so Berlin imposed rationing. When that failed, Albert Speer assumed complete power over production schedules, distribution channels and allowable profits.

Working for personal ends instead of the collective was as criminal in Nazi Germany as Soviet Russia. Norman Thomas, quadrennial Socialist Party presidential candidate, saw the correlation clearly, “both the communist and fascist revolutions definitely abolished laissez-faire capitalism in favor of one or another kind and degree of state capitalism. In no way was Hitler the tool of big business. He was its lenient master. So was Mussolini except that he was weaker.”

Mussolini recognized, “Fascism entirely agrees with Mr. Maynard Keynes, despite the latter’s prominent position as a Liberal. In fact, Mr. Keynes’ excellent little book, The End of Laissez-Faire (l926) might, so far as it goes, serve as a useful introduction to fascist economics.” Keynes saw the similarities too, admitting his theories, “can be much easier adapted to the conditions of a totalitarian state than . . . a large degree of laissez-faire.” Hitler built the autobahn, FDR the TVA. Propaganda notwithstanding, neither rejuvenated their economies.

FDR admired Mussolini because “the trains ran on time” and Stalin’s five year plans, but was jealous of Hitler whose economic tinkering appeared more successful than the New Deal. America wasn’t ready for FDR’s blatantly fascist Blue Eagle business model and the Supreme Court overturned several other socialist designs. The greatest dissimilarity between FDR and fascists was he enjoyed less success transforming society because the Constitution obstructed him.

Even using Republicans as proxies, there was little remotely conservative about fascism. Hitler and Mussolini were probably to the right of our left-leaning media and education establishments, but labeling Tea Partiers as fascists doesn’t indict the Right. It indicts those declaring so as radically Left.

I’m too tired to explode the biggest lie about the biggest lie about the … oh whatever.

If you need a refutation of this mess, read this. Otherwise, just have a drink.

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One big union

One big union

by digby

Chris Hayes wrote a beautiful piece about solidarity a few years back that’s well worth reading again today. It’s long, but I’ll just excerpt a little piece of it here:

The Oxford English Dictionary defines “solidarity” as: “The fact or quality, on the part of communities … of being perfectly united or at one in some respect, esp. in interests, sympathies, or aspirations.” It comes from the same Latin root as “solid” and is adapted from the French solidarité, which by the 19th century, had supplanted the “fraternité” of the French Revolution as the social glue for the impending era of enlightened utopia. Whereas “brotherhood” relied on personal intimacy and a vestigial Christian conception of fellowship, solidarity was capacious enough to lasso together enormous clusters of strangers, perhaps even all of humanity. It soon became a buzzword. At the 1900 World’s Fair, the French minister of trade announced solemnly, “Science reveals to us society’s material and ethical secret, which may be summarized in one word–solidarity.”

In the mid-19th century, solidarité crossed both the English Channel and the Atlantic. Sven-Eric Liedman, a professor of intellectual history at Sweden’s Göteborg University, writes that Americans were skeptical of the French import: In 1844, one American complained of “the uncouth French word, solidarité, now coming in such use.” While the word never quite gained the same cachet it had (and continues to have) in Europe, the American left quickly adopted it. Solidarity was the name of an early anarchist journal. Eugene Debs said solidarity was “a fact, cold and impassive as the granite foundations of a skyscraper.” And, in 1915, Ralph Chaplin of the Industrial Workers of the World wrote the labor anthem “Solidarity Forever” to the tune of “Battle Hymn of the Republic.”

Solidarity in the political vocabulary of the American left became class solidarity, workers’ solidarity, the banding together of laborers against bosses. But it possessed more than rhetorical resonance, it was also the foundation of the labor movement’s most potent tool: the strike. Only if workers stuck together under incredible pressures–violent intimidation from Pinkerton thugs and national guardsmen with rifles–could a strike be successful. In the 1880s and 1890s, as members of the Knights of Labor struck across the country for an eight-hour day, its motto was: “An injury to one is the concern of all.”

Years later, the United Auto Workers, born of a series of dramatic sit-down strikes in the 1930s, named its headquarters Solidarity House, its publication Solidarity; at its 1970 convention Walter Reuther told the delegates: “We have taken on the most powerful corporations in the world and despite their power and their great wealth, we have always prevailed, because … there is no power in the world that can stop the forward march of free men and women when they are joined in the solidarity of human brotherhood.”

While in the United States, the word has been ghettoized in the labor movement, solidarity in Europe remains part of mainstream political vocabulary. The labor rights guaranteed in the European Union charter are collectively referred to as “rights to solidarity.”

Of course, any word that packs a moral punch will soon find itself appropriated by political hucksters. To wit: For last year’s State of the Union, Rep. Bobby Jindal (R-La.) organized fellow Republicans in a display of “solidarity” with the Iraqis who had just voted in their first election in decades. “Congress Dons Purple Clothes, Ink, for Solidarity with Iraqis,” read the AP headline. In addition to their ink-stained fingers, the article noted, “Several women, including newly appointed Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, traded their red suits for violet.”

From workers’ struggle to Condoleezza Rice’s evening wear–what a long, strange trip it’s been.

Indeed. Hayes wrote his piece in the first aftermath of the New York transit strike in 2005, over which the chattering classes all staged a hissy fit, but New York citizens took in stride — and solidarity. Reading it again, brought to mind Rick Perlstein’s marvelous article in the American Prospect called Solidarity Squandered about that amazing solidarity in the US after 9/11 — and what happened to it. It’s all good, but this piece of it captures the way it fell apart almost immediately in service of a dishonest and corrupt agenda:

Most memorably, Bush appealed for solidarity with Americans who came from Arab countries: “I ask you to uphold the values of America and remember why so many have come here. We’re in a fight for our principles, and our first responsibility is to live by them.”

But the squandering had already begun, and precisely on the terms the president said he refused. The Justice Department had already started secretly detaining nationals from Islamic countries on minor immigration charges or no charges at all. In press conferences, Attorney General John Ashcroft called them “suspected terrorists.” More than 600 were tried in secret immigration proceedings closed even to members of Congress. When critics complained, Ashcroft responded (in his December 2001 testimony to Congress), “To those who pit Americans against immigrants and citizens against noncitizens, those who scare peace-loving people with phantoms of lost liberty, my message is this: Your tactics only aid terrorists, for they erode our national unity and diminish our resolve.”

Not a single one of the detainees would be convicted of a terror-related offense.

Orwellian language was suddenly everywhere—not least in the Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001. It was all about uniting America, don’t you see? Its tools were merely the appropriate ones. Disagree? Well, you must not be a USA patriot.

The president invited us to plant victory gardens of credit-card receipts. The day after the National Cathedral convocation, the president was asked “how much of a sacrifice ordinary Americans could be expected to make,” and he honored the warm courage of national unity by answering, “Our hope, of course, is that they make no sacrifice whatsoever.” Dick Cheney advised Americans to “stick their thumbs in the eye of the terrorists” by not allowing the national crusade against terror “in any way to throw off their normal level of economic activity.” Bush infamously told a gathering of aviation employees, “Get down to Disney World in Florida. Take your families and enjoy life the way we want it to be enjoyed.” Finally, this sacrifice, which he suggested on October 4: “We need for there to be more tax cuts.”

The war, too, would look far different from what those of us who had surrendered to trust believed we had signed on for. We had heard Bush when he declared, “we are in a fight for our principles, and our first responsibility is to live by them.” It turned out, however, that this was not the fight the Bushies were spoiling for. Ever since the Cold War, conservatives have been floundering without a garrison state. They had embraced the wisdom of Samuel Huntington’s Clinton-era volume, The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order, whose message, as legal scholar Stephen Holmes described it in The London Review of Books, was, “The secular optimism of those who believe that mankind is being drawn into peaceful coexistence and mutually beneficial cooperation by the growth of global markets is not only misplaced: it is suicidal. … For self-definition and motivation, people need enemies.” Bloody fortunate we had one now.

The things that happen every time God’s chosen nation goes to war to save civilization happened again. We witnessed civil-liberties violations, knuckleheaded jingoism, attacks on internal enemies (and not just Arab Americans), and the almost systematic suspension of sound judgment by experts and mandarins, who sought monsters to slay. Michael Kelly, editor of The Atlantic, called the left “objectively pro-terrorist,” and blogger Andrew Sullivan wrote that “the decadent left in its enclaves on the coasts … may well mount what amounts to a fifth column.”

A little more than a year later, when the administration proposed to go to war in Iraq, it became clear that many still surrendered to trust. Representative Dick Gephardt explained that he had voted for the war because “an A-bomb in a Ryder truck in New York, in Washington, and St. Louis … cannot happen.” The New Republic excoriated the “abject pacifism” and “intellectual incoherence of the liberal war critics.” New Yorker editor David Remnick wrote, “History will not easily excuse us if … we defer a reckoning with an aggressive totalitarian leader who intends not only to develop weapons of mass destruction but also to use them.” He concluded, “A return to a hollow pursuit of containment will be the most dangerous option of all.”

America had changed. Liberals, too many of us, had changed. We were not acting like guardians of solidarity. We were acting like suckers.

As he says, the Republicans were even worse. But then, why wouldn’t they be? They have long led a concerted campaign to divide people along ideological fault lines that have always existed and only sometimes exploited.

I guess there’s no way to truly measure what that destruction of trust did to our national psyche, coming as it did in the wake of an unprecedented attack that left us feeling uniquely vulnerable as a nation. But it was bad. In fact for people who came of age politically in that era, I think it was scarring on a very fundamental level and has made them wary of any belief in human folly that isn’t grounded in corruption and deceit and determinedly cynical about the whole concept of solidarity.

But, there is a way back. Look at Wisconsin. People there have been radicalized, in that good, “solidarity” kind of way. Average people looking out for each other, having a stake in each other’s survival is certainly possible. But it’s going to take an effort on the part of the people to face down the plutocrats and the politicians who represent us. It’s been done before.

As you think about all this stuff today, reading those fine pieces, listen to this song:

Howie writes:

This one’s by Iowa rockers Matthew Grimm & the Red Smear. Adam from Traveling Light did the YouTube clip. I would have liked to have seen them up on stage in Detroit today with Aretha, Hilda Solis and Obama.

By the way, Matthew Grimm gave me 3 autographed CDs, The Ghost of Rock’n’Roll, the album with “one Big Union.” Contribute to one of the pro-working family candidates on this page today and you could win one of the CDs. We’ll pick 3 winners in the morning.

In solidarity.

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Stuck in the pink collar ghetto

Stuck in the pink collar ghetto

by digby

TPM

Monday is Labor Day, a day off for most Americans who spend a good deal of their lives toiling at work. It’s also a stark reminder to those who don’t need reminding: the unemployed and the underemployed. But even those have a job are seeing less and less in returns from that job, says new data from Gallup released Monday. Nearly across the board employees are less satisfied with their health care benefits, their chances for a promotion, job security, and of course, wages.

NY Times:

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, average real hourly earnings for all employees actually declined by 1.1 percent from June 2009, when the recovery began, to May 2011, the month for which the most recent earnings numbers are available.

The authors said another factor explaining the weak performance for aggregate wages and salaries was the slow growth in weekly hours during the recovery. At the same time, worker productivity has grown just under 6 percent since the recovery began, helping to keep employment down while lifting corporate profits, the study said.

One of the more interesting things about reporting on the economy is how little anyone ever questions the effect of high unemployment on the employed. Since I’m old I’ve been through a few recessions in my working life. None of them were as bad as this one, but the early 80s Reagan recession was pretty devastating, and I recall what it was like to be employed in the pink collar ghetto as a low level office worker.

On the job it was murder — in a sellers job market, the entry level worker has even less clout that usual. The whole relationship between staff and employer shifts in dozens of small ways as both parties know that any worker can be replaced without much fuss.I subsisted on low paid office jobs, each one abusive and exploitative in its own way, and finally decided to leave the country for a while. It was that bad.

During the 91 recession, which hit quite a bit later (and lasted longer)in California, I was no longer a grunt, but when we laid off a quarter of the workforce, I ended up taking up the slack. My workload became exhausting as I had to absorb several of my former staff’s duties and much of the clerical work I’d left behind long before. (Notably, most of my surviving male colleagues managed to avoid that.) They called it “increased productivity” then too and I didn’t get compensated for the increased duties and responsibilities, of course. Luckily, the boom hit not long after and I was able to go to greener pastures and make up for the several years of stagnant wages. If it hadn’t, that would have been the end of the line for me, careerwise. (It matters where you are in your career arc when these things hit — women have a particularly small window before they become unpromotable.)

I’m sure there are many such lucky duckies in this recession who are stuck in dead end jobs they hate and see no light at the end of the tunnel. Certainly the vast army of female office workers, who keep the corporate and government bureaucracies running, are even more stuck, looking at futures that dead-end in a cubical, watching their already slim chances of advancement slip away, hanging on for the health benefits if nothing else.

There is no quitting, there are no raises, there is no consideration of your personal dignity. You’re in for the duration, hoping against hope that you can hang on, that the company doesn’t fold, keeping your head down, just trying to ride it out. You certainly don’t spend and eventually you stop dreaming. It’s just too painful after a while. It’s better than being unemployed, for sure. But it’s not as if you aren’t affected just the same.

High unemployment is bad for all workers.

Here’s a hearty Happy Labor Day to all the workers in the pink collar ghetto (and every one else too.)You deserve the break.

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Goldilocks hailed from Chicago

Goldilocks hailed from Chicago

by digby

Here’s your most vapid — and insulting — quote of the day. On labor day, no less:

“My view is that the Republican claim that ‘job-killing regulation’ is a redundancy is as ridiculous as the left-wing view that ‘job-killing regulation’ is an oxymoron,” said Cass Sunstein, head of the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs. “Both are silly political claims that have no place in a serious discussion.”

I guess that makes him juuuust right.

Except, you know, it doesn’t. Republicans do claim that all regulation is job-killing because they are greedy bastards who don’t care much about their fellow man. But I don’t know of even one “left-winger” who believes that regulations never kill jobs. Indeed, it’s ridiculous. Some regulations kill jobs. Some regulations create jobs. Often, they do both. You’d have to bedead not to be aware of the costs to certain people in any change. At least the left gives a damn about what happens to people who lose their jobs for whatever reason and would offer them some kind of compensation. The right calls them freeloaders and moochers and tells them to get a job at McDonalds.

And anyway, the “silly” political argument in all this is the mind-boggling notion that compromising with these wingnuts and industrial polluters on a few discreet issues like the Clean Air rules is going to buy you another term. Talk about not having a place in a serious discussion …

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Basic Economics by David Atkins

Basic economics
by David Atkins (“thereisnospoon”)

My fiancee is a graduate student at UC Santa Barbara in the Communication Department. Next quarter she is taking a class in economics. Her textbook is International Economics, 13th edition by Robert J. Carbaugh. A quick look at Dr. Carbaugh’s CV shows a fairly balanced career with no direct evidence of wingnut ideological fervor. And yet, consider these passages from the first chapter:

International competition helps keep domestic producers on their toes and provides them with a strong incentive to improve the quality of their products. Also, international trade usually weakens monopolies.

I’m sure multinational conglomerates would be surprised to hear that.

As an economy opens up to international trade, domestic prices become more aligned with international prices; wages tend to increase for workers whose skills are more scarce internationally than at home and to decrease for workers who face increased competition from foreign workers…Increased competition also suggests that unless countries match the productivity gains of their competitors, the wages of their will deteriorate. It is no wonder that works in import-competing industries often lobby for restrictions on the importation of goods so as to neutralize the threat of foreign competition…

However, keep in mind that what is true for the part is not necessarily true for the whole. It is certainly true that imports of steel or automobiles can eliminate American jobs. But it is not true that imports decrease the total number of jobs in a nation. A large increase in U.S. imports will inevitably lead to a rise in U.S. exports or foreign investment in the United States.

Note that this is an article of faith among economists. No proof to back this up, nor any significant data. Simply an article of free-market faith.

In other words, if American suddenly wanted more European autos, eventually American exports would have to increase to pay for these products. The jobs lost in one industry are replaced by jobs gained in another industry. The long-run effect of trade barriers is thus not to increase total domestic employment, but at best to reallocate workers away from export industries and toward less efficient, import-competing industries. This reallocation leads to less efficient utilization of resources.

Simply put, international trade is just another kind of technology. Think of it as a machine that adds value to its inputs.

When these sorts of amazingly baldfaced lies aren’t being pushed in the text, there is also the total lack of regard for basic human dignity, as when discussing the troubles of farmers in India due to free trade:

The simple solution to the problem of India’s farmers would be to move them from growing cotton to weaving it in factories. But India’s restrictive labor laws discourage industrial employment, and the lack of a safety net resulted in farmers clinging to their marginal plots of land.

Or this suggestion for how American workers might adapt to globalization:

The way to ease the fear of globalization is to help people to move to different jobs as comparative advantage shifts rapidly from one activity to the next. This process implies a more flexible labor market and a regulatory system that fosters investment. It implies an education system that provides people with the skills that make them mobile. It also implies removing health care and pensions from employment, so that when you move to a new job, you are not risking an awful lot besides. And for those who lose their jobs, it implies strengthening training policies to help them find work. Indeed, these activities are expensive, and they may take years to work. But an economy that finds its national income increasing because of globalization can more easily find the money for pay for it.

If this is the crap that is being fed to basic economics students, it’s no wonder that the entire world’s leaders have gone seemingly insane when it comes to economic policy. The entire economic profession has gone insane or been utterly corrupted.

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Always and forever uncool

Always and forever uncool

by digby

Tbogg:

If there is one thing that makes conservatives absolutely crazy (besides liberals and poor people and homosexuals and government and brown people and Social Security and Medicare and abortion and science and intellectuals with their so-called “knowledge” and clean air and clean water and good looking women who won’t sleep with them probably because they’re dykes, yeah, that’s it and foreigners with their weird not-english languages and. oh yeah, sarcasm thatalways seems to be directed at them and then there’s Hollywood and hip hop music and how Dateline and that snoopy busybody Chris Hansen have made it almost impossible to find a date online and also that Kenyan muslim President guy who is very annoying because … did I mention that he’s black?) it’s the fact that conservatives can’t pry the youth of America away from their tattoos and their texting and casual swapping of STD’s long enough to teach them about how awesome America is. But you know what kids like? They like mid-tempo fist-pumping patriotic rock music that middle-aged pot-bellied white guys in stretched out Tom Petty Damn the Torpedoes t-shirts practice on their slightly out-of-tune guitars in the garage on Saturday afternoons because, hey, fifty-three isn’t too old to be hailed as the future of rock and roll, is it?Well, yeah it is.But that hasn’t stop budding Don Kirchner-wannabe Richard Mgrdechian from putting together The Next Big Thing:

My company, Purple Eagle Entertainment is looking for an awesome rock vocalist (age 21 – 40) to be the front man and lead singer for a new pro-American rock band we formed to record an album of original compositions and begin a national tour later this year. The ideal person should be extremely passionate about patriotic causes and have an in-depth knowledge of politics. The band is made up of world class rock musicians. A long term contract and signing bonus is available. A $1,000 fee is available to the person who refers us to the singer we sign on for this.

Read on for the details and to listen to a sampling of this project’s musical offerings. Or jab chopsticks in your ears for the same general effect.

I gotchya patriotic rock for yah, rightcheah:

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Galts 1, Parasites 0

Galts 1, Parasites 0

by digby

Shocking Labor Day factoid:

A new study reveals that 25 of the nation’s largest corporations paid more money to their CEOs last year than they did to the federal government in income taxes. Often using overseas tax havens, many of the corporations managed to make billions in profits but paid little to nothing in federal taxes. In many cases the companies received large tax rebates. The list includes some of the country’s best-known companies, such as Ford, Coca-Cola, Verizon, General Electric and eBay. The same study found that the ratio of CEO pay to that of the average worker in the United States jumped to 325-to-1 last year.

That sound you just heard was the sound of Randroids everywhere have a simultaneous orgasm.

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Sarah Palin, Firebagger by David Atkins

Sarah Palin, Firebagger

by David Atkins (“thereisnospoon”)

Sarah Palin’s latest critique against career politicians is amusing in its total lack of self-awareness:

But in a 40-minute speech before a Tea Party rally here, which was one of her most expansive addresses since she accepted the Republican vice presidential nomination three years ago, she railed against “crony capitalism” in both parties. She suggested that the “permanent political class” — Republicans, too — needed to be rattled.

That’s pretty funny coming from someone who has spent their life in as a permanent politician. Until she quit, of course.

But it’s also deeply instructive. Check out the rhetorical assault Palin lays down on the Republican establishment:

“You know that it’s not enough to just change up the uniform,” Ms. Palin said. “If we don’t change the team and the game plan we won’t save our country…”

In her speech, Ms. Palin assailed the Washington establishment, directing most of her criticism at President Obama, but saving plenty for Republicans. The themes carried familiar strains from her time as governor of Alaska, when she was known for an independent streak that aggravated both parties.

“The real challenge is who and what we will replace him with,” Ms. Palin said, referring to her goal of making Mr. Obama a one-term president. She added, “America is at a tipping point. This is a systemic crisis due to failed policies and incompetent leadership.”

Wow. It sounds almost like the sort of commentary one might see from progressive bloggers about the Washington establishment.

Ms. Palin criticized career politicians. She did not mention any candidates by name, but her aides have quietly pushed back against the conventional wisdom that she was considering endorsing Gov. Rick Perry of Texas. She said that it was not enough simply to replace Mr. Obama with an ordinary Republican administration.

“You must vet a candidate’s record,” Ms. Palin said, delivering an admonition to a crowd that traveled here from Iowa and points across the country. “You must know their ability to successfully reform and actually fix problems that they are going to claim that they inherited.”

This is the sort of rhetoric that has inspired the Tea Party and the entire Republican base. It has made mincemeat of John Boehner’s and George W. Bush’s reputation with the GOP base. But it has also served to significantly strengthen the Republicans’ position, leading to the most conservative incoming House freshman crew in the nation’s history. Sarah Palin’s approach to politics has been wildly successful for the conservative movement, even as it no doubt harmed her personal popularity among moderates and her electability.

She herself will never set foot in the White House. But she has made it far more likely that a hardcore right winger will do so, even at the expense of the GOP establishment and its previously nearest and dearest leaders. By serving in that role, Sarah Palin has done more to help enact conservative policies than half of the Republicans actually elected to public office. Combined.

It’s a lesson that Democrats who cringe at the slightest critique of President Obama from the left would do well to remember.

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