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Month: December 2011

Flip Floppers by David Atkins

Flip floppers

by David Atkins

For what it’s worth, it’s important to remember that it’s not just progressives who are frustrated with politicians who don’t stand firm on the principles they share:

Republicans may be enthusiastic about beating President Barack Obama, but a GOP focus group shows they are less enthusiastic about the candidates they’re fielding against him.

A focus group of 12 GOP primary voters conducted in northern Virginia–a battleground state–showed that GOP voters have not warmed up to Mitt Romney, are worried about Newt Gingrich’s volatility, and have all but dismissed the candidacy of Herman Cain. What’s more, they see their two frontrunners as suffering from the same potentially deadly problem: a penchant to flip flop…

While these voters admired Romney’s business acumen, they were critical of what they see as a candidate who changes his views on issues like abortion and same-sex marriage–and jeopardizes his credibility as a result. Some described him as a “problem solver,” who has “good experience.” Yet others saw a politician who is “wishy-washy,” and “manufactured…”

The good news for Romney is that Gingrich has received the same criticism for flipping on issues like global warming, health care and Libya policy–and that did not escape some in the group. The real worry was that someone who does not stick with his views would be less able to convincingly take on Obama.

If President Obama were running against a generic Republican in 2012, he probably wouldn’t stand much of a chance. Fortunately, he’s going up against actual flesh-and-blood Republicans. People who look pretty horrible not only to most Democrats and independents, but to many Republicans as well.

In case you missed it, here’s the DNC’s great video on Mitt Romney:

Threat or Opportunity?

Threat or Opportunity?

by digby

I don’t know how many of you are old enough to remember when Richard Nixon went on Laugh-In and said “sock it to me” but it was, in retrospect, a sign that the revolution had been absorbed into popular culture and was being exploited by the man, just as if it was a new brand of deodorant.

Pretty soon even politicians were all sporting longer hair and sideburns and wearing big ties. Check this out:

Of course, he was a hippie (and a war hero) but whatever.

Anyway, that’s the first thing that came into my mind when I saw this:

Dear Corporate Communications Professional,

What affect is “Occupy Wall Street” having on corporate image and corporate communications plans? It’s time for answers.

All participants will receive the survey results at the December 7th New York/IABCmeeting: “Occupy Wall Street”: Threat or Opportunity for Corporate America? New York / IABC “SHOW AND TELL”: A one-hour, hands-on panel for business communicators.

You’ll learn in what areas the top corporate communicators are focusing on in their communications preparation to “OWS”; the dramatic increase in broadcast coverage of the “OWS” phenomenon and the broadcast and business media’s take on how it will affect their coverage as well as its role in the 2012 Presidential election – and that’s just from one of our amazing panelists. From the others, we’ll pull the curtain away on how senior level communicators are planning and preparing for “OWS”. The results will be released at this meeting, along with the results of a separate “Occupy Wall Street” survey of business and broadcast media being conducted by D S Simon.
I’ve thought from the beginning that greatest threat of “co-option” came not from the political parties or special interest groups which, let’s face it, just aren’t that good. The greatest threat of co-option comes from business itself.
If anyone goes to this thing I’d love to hear about it.
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Alert the Attorney General: This is the easiest prosecution in the world

The easiest prosecution in the world

by digby

You know, I’m not surprised that banks are screwing over your average poor and middle class person. It’s just how they roll. It is a little bit shocking, however, that they are blatantly breaking an explicit law not to screw service members who are deployed overseas.

Here’s congressional candidate Darcy Burner asking Attorney General Holder to do his job:

Seriously, if you can’t enforce a law like this then you might as well pack it in. I’m fairly sure that the only people in the country (and I mean that literally) who think this is ok are those who are perpetrating the crime and their friends in the industry. This one isn’t hard.

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You vill give me your papers

You vill give me your papers

by digby

Shades of Stasi:

To arrest one foreign car-making executive under Alabama’s new tough immigration laws may be regarded as a misfortune; to arrest a second looks like carelessness.

A judge has acted to put a Japanese employee of Honda Motor Company out of his misery by dismissing immigration charges against him, three days after he was booked under Alabama’s new immigration laws that have been billed as the most swingeing in America. Ichiro Yada is one of about 100 Japanese managers of the company on assignment in southern state.

He was caught in a “driver’s license” checkpoint, which is new to me. Evidently, they are just stopping everybody and demanding their papers now.

The cops are actually just doing their job. The law doesn’t say to just book people who look Mexican, although that was certainly the intent. These cops are just booking anyone who is “foreign” and isn’t carrying the right paperwork. The fact that they happen to work for two of the biggest employers in the state is just an unfortunate wrinkle.

According to the article, Missouri is taking out ads inviting the car manufacturers to move there, which is pretty smart. And, in fact, they should move their plants. It’s clear that Alabama is an unfriendly place for anyone who doesn’t look like a Real American so they should take there money someplace where they’re welcome.

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Staying the course, right over the cliff

Staying the course, right over the cliff

by digby

Brad DeLong muses about the sad fact that Nick Clegg hasn’t forced Cameron to resign in the UK. He points out that Clegg’s career would be over … but then it already is.

He says:

It may be the end of the Liberal Democrats–but they have a much better chance if they admit they made a big mistake in selling their soul to the Conservatives for a mess of pottage than if they try to brazen it out and support the current government.

It is long past time for the Liberal Democrats in Britain to go into opposition: for them to cross the aisle and declare that they have no confidence in the Cameron-Osborne government. The longer they delay, the worse for Britain.

That certainly does point out the virtues of a parliamentary system doesn’t it?

He links to this great piece by Paul Krugman discussing where the government went wrong and asks:

Why are Cameron and Osborne incapable of admitting that they made a bad mistake, firing their advisors, and changing their course? I think that it’s the fact that they have been raised on the myth of Margaret Thatcher, who Stayed the Course.

I’m guessing it’s the same here, actually. “Stay the course” was the Reagan mantra too and the President and his men seemed to be convinced that their economic and electoral trajectory was going to be the same as his as well. I believe that this presidency was modeled in many ways on Reagan’s. The policies, of course, aren’t exactly the same, but the notion of “transformation” was always there and Obama explicitly saw himself as one who would be as transformative as the Gipper.

I think the question that was never asked about all that was what the transformation was going to look like. And I’m increasingly convinced that he didn’t know the answer.

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It’s a Trend by David Atkins

It’s a Trend

by David Atkins

More good news:

Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and legislative leaders, seeking ways to shore up a state budget strained by the weak economy, are ironing out the details of a deal that would raise income taxes on the wealthy and cut them for the middle class.

Top aides to the officeholders planned to meet through the weekend, as New York State lawmakers prepared to return to Albany next week for a special session of the Legislature that the governor appeared likely to call.

Members of the Democratic majority in the State Assembly were notified that they should be ready to return to the capital on Tuesday. Negotiations were still in the preliminary stages on Friday, and rank-and-file lawmakers had not yet been briefed on the discussions. But several people who were briefed said it was possible that a deal could be reached within days.

Look for more and more of this as we get closer to November 2012. Cynical, you say? Maybe. But legislation is legislation, no matter the motives. Almost all politics is cynical, anyway.

Of course, as I have said in the past, merely instituting redistributive taxes doesn’t solve the problem of how we got such massive income inequality in the first place. The economy would still be structurally broken even with a 50% or higher marginal tax rate on the highest incomes, and redistributive taxation only assuages the problem. But it’s a damn good start regardless.

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Income Inequality for chumps

Income Inequality for chumps

by digby

According to this AEI scholar, income inequality has absolutely nothing to do with the wealthy rigging the system to their advantage. It’s pretty much all the fault of immigrants and poor people. In fact, the only role the wealthy play in this apparently, is just being so damned good at what they do — financial services and technology — that their rewards are just naturally hundreds of times more than the average worker. (This is because of globalization. Or something.)

Anyway, if you tax them something really bad will happen which he says is made obvious by the way California and New York have “bumped up against the limits of economic reality.” I would assume that means there’s been a huge exodus of their billionaires — except that hasn’t happened. In fact, the economic reality we are facing in California is the total destruction of the state’s infrastructure and educational systems, which would be helped by having the billionaires pay more but is made impossible by the political constraints created by people who insist on starving the beast. In the end we are going to be a state where doing business is very difficult, but that won’t be because the upper 1% are taxed too much. It will be because the whole place is falling apart like an ancient ruin.

In any case, that’s not really his point. What’s really causing income inequality is all these immigrants who he seems to think are keeping wages low. But it’s not entirely obvious to me how this would affect the huge income disparities between the middle class and the upper 1%. (If you’re a nurse, how does it follow that the low wages of a day laborer are pushing your wages down?) Anyway, it sounds as though he thinks that if we open up all those low wage jobs to real Americans we’ll all be making a lot more money. (I guess he figures that we will be making so much more that we will also be able to pay ten dollars for a tomato, so that’s good.)
The other major problem — the real problem I’d guess — is that in recent years the nuclear family has fallen apart and Wally and Beav are all screwed up on drugs and sex so they don’t know how to hold down a decent job. You see, once we dismantled the American family with all that dysfunctional single motherhood and subsequent crappy parenting, we ruined the workforce.
I’m guessing he believes this would all disappear if we went back to the day when America was truly a great country where everyone lived in lovely little suburbs and was raised in nice two parent families so they learned what it was to work hard. Except, you know, that was something that existed (to the extent it actually did exist) for a couple of decades after World War II.
I’m sure he’s be shocked to learn the truth: this country was actually built by poor, illiterate immigrants, most of whom were separated from their families for long stretches of time — or forever. The extended families that all lived together in cities and on farms were as filled with dysfunction and violence as anything you see today.
The absurd notion that poor people with bad character who are incapable of working hard is as old as the hills. (See: Dickens, Charles) It’s always been a very convenient rationale for the inbred aristocracy to explain why it deserves its ill-gotten gains. And it’s always been bullshit.
We know what’s causing income inequality and it has everything to do with the greed and avarice of the top 1% and nothing to do with the poor dragging down the middle class. But there are always people out there ready to spin that tale and, unfortunately, many people who are willing to believe it. After all, it’s a lot scarier to take on powerful interests than it is to step on poor people. But they’re chumps if they do.
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Covert delusion

Covert Delusion
by digby

Earlier this week Glenn Greenwald took Roger Cohen to task for his endorsement of a secretive, unaccountable foreign policy in this NY Times op-ed. It truly is a stellar example of elite journalism’s identification with government and its pathological belief that its job is to help it keep its secrets.

But I’m also interested in the phenomenon Cohen examines in his piece — the various secret wars the administration has taken up and the contrast with the Bush administration’s attempts to legalize the same covert practices. This is a very interesting observation because I remember having various inchoate thoughts during the Bush years about how strange it was that Cheney et al were so intent upon creating a legal framework for their misdeeds. I wrote quite a bit about the effect of legalizing torture and aggressive wars as a way of normalizing pathology in our culture, but in retrospect I think that perhaps that didn’t matter as much as I thought. It’s certainly important that such things not be made legal and normal, but in the end, the important thing is to ensure they are not practiced.

It’s reminiscent of the fight before the Iraq invasion over UN approval.Yes, it mattered that the Bush administration defied international law and invaded without UN approval. But if they had had it, the war would not have been any more right or moral. I think we get a little bit tangled up in processes sometimes and forget the fundamental issue.

But it is interesting, nonetheless, that the Bush administration tried to legalize these immoral practices because the whole post war history among both parties was littered with secret, covert foreign policy initiatives and the GWOT seemed to offered the perfect excuse for more. But they seemed to want to prove that their ideological predispositions were acceptable and mainstream and so sought to legalize them. It was very odd. In that regard, Obama is just reverting to former norms by being secretive.

Unfortunately he seems to be reverting to it with a vengeance. When I read the Cohen piece I couldn’t help but be reminded of this WaPo column from a couple of months ago by David Ignatius:

It’s an interesting anomaly of Barack Obama’s presidency that this liberal Democrat, known before the 2008 election for his antiwar views, has been so comfortable running America’s secret wars.

Obama’s leadership style — and the continuity of his national security policies with those of his predecessor, George W. Bush — has left friends and foes scratching their heads. What has become of the “change we can believe in” style he showed as a candidate? The answer may be that he has disappeared into the secret world of the post-Sept. 11 presidency.
[…]
Obama is the commander in chief as covert operator. The flag-waving “mission accomplished” speeches of his predecessor aren’t Obama’s thing; even his public reaction to the death of bin Laden was relatively subdued. Watching Obama, the reticent, elusive man whose dual identity is chronicled in “Dreams From My Father,” you can’t help wondering if he has an affinity for the secret world. He is opaque, sometimes maddeningly so, in the way of an intelligence agent.

Intelligence is certainly an area where the president appears confident and bold. James Clapper, the director of national intelligence who has been running spy agencies for more than 20 years, regards Obama as “a phenomenal user and understander of intelligence.” When Clapper briefs the president each morning, he brings along extra material to feed the president’s hunger for information.

This is a president, too, who prizes his authority to conduct covert action. Clapper’s predecessor, Adm. Dennis Blair, lost favor in part because he sought to interpose himself in the chain of covert action. That encroached on Obama, who aides say sees it as a unique partnership with the CIA…

Perhaps Obama’s comfort level with his intelligence role helps explain why he has done other parts of the job less well. He likes making decisions in private, where he has the undiluted authority of the commander in chief. He likes information, as raw and pertinent as possible, and he gets impatient listening to windy political debates. He likes action, especially when he doesn’t leave fingerprints.

Even Ignatius, who is a believer in covert foreign policy and an admirer or President Obama, is unnerved by this:

There is a seduction to the secret world, which for generations has charmed presidents and their advisers. It’s easier pulling the levers in the dark, playing the keys of what a CIA official once called the “mighty Wurlitzer” of covert action. Politics is a much messier process – out in the open, making deals with bullies and blowhards. But that’s the part of the job that Obama must master if he wants another term.

This rings true to me. I have always believed that Obama is animated by foreign policy and that domestic concerns (and the messy politics required) aren’t his thing. And that’s fine. Presidents have to do everything, of course, and I’m sure he’s fully engaged in the economy. But it’s the global issues he most interested in and what motivated him to run in the first place. What’s surprising is the extent to which he’s embraced the secretive world of covert action. I don’t think people expected that.

I honestly don’t know what’s worse — legalizing immoral wars or running them covertly. They’re both bad. But liberals who condemned the Bush administration for its open defiance of civilized norms and embrace of an Imperial policy should be forgiven if they are equally appalled that President Obama is doing the same thing covertly. On the other hand, perhaps it’s also the case that many people were more concerned about the legalization of these tactics than the tactics themselves. There were plenty of arguments along those lines during the Bush administration. (As I said, I think I fell into that trap from time to time myself, simply by worrying so much about the effects of making torture legal on the society at large.)

In other words, it’s the process they don’t like rather than the substance. I don’t know if that’s the case but the fact that these practices have been so common for so long under both Democrats and Republicans — and that the only time people get agitated is when the government seeks to do it openly — argues for the latter. It’s not something that Americans should be proud of. Having the government do this dirty work under cover of night is undemocratic — even if the people prefer it that way. The people are ultimately responsible, either way.

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Spare me the change

Spare me the change

by digby

Boy, do I think this is bad:

It’s been a subtle alteration but an alteration nonetheless. In his past two campaign speeches, President Barack Obama has adopted a construct that puts particular emphasis on how his 2008 promise of change has resulted in practical life improvement.

At a fundraiser Wednesday night in New York City, the new line was on display, with the president deploying the phrase “Change is” on a dozen occasions.

“Change is the first bill I signed into law — a law that says you get an equal day’s work — somebody who puts in an equal day’s work should get equal day’s pay.”

“Change is the decision we made to rescue the auto company from collapse, even when some politicians were saying we should let Detroit go bankrupt.”

“Change is the decision we made to stop waiting for Congress to do something about our addiction to oil and finally raise fuel-efficiency standards for the first time in 30 years.”

“Change is health care reform that we passed after a century of trying.”

And so on.

“Change” is like a song that I once loved but has been so overplayed that I switch the station every time I hear the opening chords. It’s a song I don’t ever want to hear again.

Seriously, I think this is a bad idea. When he said change in 2008, I think most people saw it as a promise to change the way politics worked. It was a fatuous premise to begin with and now it’s even moreso. Our politics are as broken as they can be.

The fact that the campaign is clinging to its glory days is yet another sign that they truly believed their own hype. To try to recapture that moment with a laundry list of legislation is actually kind of sad. The president has to run on his record and of course he will tout the highlights. But the “vision thing” has been sorely tested and came up very short. People disagree on the extent of his responsibility for that, but there’s just no question that the “hope and change” of 2008 is no longer operative. For their sake, I hope they aren’t under the illusion that they can revive it. They need to re-tool for reality.

On the other hand, maybe they don’t need to do anything. After all, the Republicans are apparently deserting the field:

Donald Trump is pairing up with Newsmax, the conservative magazine and news Web site, to moderate a presidential debate in Des Moines on Dec. 27.

“Our readers and the grass roots really love Trump,” said Christopher Ruddy, chief executive of Newsmax Media. “They may not agree with
him on everything, but they don’t see him as owned by the Washington establishment, the media establishment.”

Mr. Trump’s role in the debate, which will be broadcast on the cable network Ion Television, is sure to be one of the more memorable moments in a primary season that has already delivered its fair share of circus-like spectacle.

It’s hard to see how President Obama can lose with this competition. I almost wonder if they aren’t throwing it deliberately.

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Criminalizing childhood

Criminalizing childhood

by digby

Here’s yet another case of turning normal childhood behavior into a pathology:

A Boston elementary school is investigating a 7-year-old first-grader for sexual harassment after he struck another boy his age in the groin.

No, this little boy didn’t leer and grab the other kids’ junk. It was a fist fight. Between two boys. In the second grade.

Matthew Wilder, spokesman for the Boston public schools, declined to comment on the incident or why it has been classified as a possible case of sexual harassment. He said officials do not discuss confidential student information.

“Any kind of inappropriate touching would fall under that category,’’ Wilder said. “The school administration is conducting a full investigation that has not concluded yet. Certainly, once that investigation is through, we’ll then make a final conclusion as to who will be disciplined and how.’’

This is one of the reasons why people don’t take sexual harassment seriously.

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