Skip to content

Month: February 2012

Thinking Ahead by @DavidOAtkins

Thinking Ahead

by David Atkins

Adam Liptak at The New York Times has a brave article about the declining influence of the U.S. Constitution as a model overseas. I’m sure he’ll catch huge grief for it on both sides of the political spectrum, but his point is an important one:

In 1987, on the Constitution’s bicentennial, Time magazine calculated that “of the 170 countries that exist today, more than 160 have written charters modeled directly or indirectly on the U.S. version.”

A quarter-century later, the picture looks very different. “The U.S. Constitution appears to be losing its appeal as a model for constitutional drafters elsewhere,” according to a new study by David S. Law of Washington University in St. Louis and Mila Versteeg of the University of Virginia.

The study, to be published in June in The New York University Law Review, bristles with data. Its authors coded and analyzed the provisions of 729 constitutions adopted by 188 countries from 1946 to 2006, and they considered 237 variables regarding various rights and ways to enforce them.

“Among the world’s democracies,” Professors Law and Versteeg concluded, “constitutional similarity to the United States has clearly gone into free fall. Over the 1960s and 1970s, democratic constitutions as a whole became more similar to the U.S. Constitution, only to reverse course in the 1980s and 1990s.

“The turn of the twenty-first century, however, saw the beginning of a steep plunge that continues through the most recent years for which we have data, to the point that the constitutions of the world’s democracies are, on average, less similar to the U.S. Constitution now than they were at the end of World War II.”

There are lots of possible reasons. Our Constitution is terse and old, and it guarantees relatively few rights. The commitment of some members of the Supreme Court to interpreting the Constitution according to its original meaning in the 18th century may send the signal that it is of little current use to, say, a new African nation. And the Constitution’s waning influence may be part of a general decline in American power and prestige.

In an interview, Professor Law identified a central reason for the trend: the availability of newer, sexier and more powerful operating systems in the constitutional marketplace. “Nobody wants to copy Windows 3.1,” he said.

In a television interview during a visit to Egypt last week, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg seemed to agree. “I would not look to the United States Constitution if I were drafting a constitution in the year 2012,” she said. She recommended, instead, the South African Constitution, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms or the European Convention on Human Rights.

The rights guaranteed by our Constitution are parsimonious by international standards, and they are frozen in amber. As Sanford Levinson wrote in 2006 in “Our Undemocratic Constitution,” “the U.S. Constitution is the most difficult to amend of any constitution currently existing in the world today.” (Yugoslavia used to hold that title, but Yugoslavia did not work out.)

That’s one way to look at it. Another way is to point out that most other nations around the world have parliamentary systems, much stronger political parties, unicameral legislatures, and much softer divisions between legislative and executive branches. When America and NATO set out to rebuild nations after invading them, they don’t design the new governments on the American model, but on a parliamentary one.

In short, for all the unfair accusations that other social democracies receive for having sclerotic economies, what they don’t have is America’s immovable political system.

Don’t get me wrong: the Constitution is a brilliant and extraordinary document, the first to guarantee many rights, and an amazing effort at solving the institutional governmental problems that had vexed other civilizations for literally millennia. But it’s also a good idea to ask ourselves what is working, what is not working, what makes sense in a more globalized world, and what we might be able to learn from the success of others.

.

The anti-birth control faction gets down to business

The anti-birth control faction gets down to business


by digby

RSC_Update_BannerMonday, February 6, 2012 RSC Update: ObamaCare’s Attack on Religious Freedom From the ChairmanIf the CLASS Act is a microcosm of the gimmicks and dishonesty involved in creating ObamaCare, one recently imposed regulation is the clearest expression yet of how government-run health care will trample on Americans’ constitutional rights.
Most people commonly associate the First Amendment with freedom of speech, but its first words are actually to guarantee us freedom of religion. Yet, under an ideological new rule handed down by HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, many organizations affiliated with the Catholic Church will be required to provide free contraceptives, sterilization, and abortion-inducing drugs in their employees’ health insurance plans.
Forcing Catholic hospitals, schools, and charities to subsidize contraception and abortion is a blatant attack on the freedom of religion that Americans have valued since the days of the Pilgrims. People of all faiths and political views should be able to agree that this action is unacceptable.
Conservatives in the House and Senate will fight this violation of religious freedom. With a groundswell of support from you and other concerned Americans, I know we can win.
Please spread the word.
God Bless, Congressman Jim JordanChairman, Republican Study Committee

So, who are these people? The usual suspects:

The Republican Study Committee [RSC] is a caucus of over 170 conservative members of the Republican Party in the United States House of Representatives. Though the primary functions of the Republican Study Committee vary from year to year, it has always pushed for significant cuts in non-defense spending, advocated socially conservative legislation, and supported the right to keep and bear arms…

It was founded in 1973 by Paul Weyrich and other conservative activists to keep a watch on the House Republican leadership, which they saw at the time as too moderate…

The organization has long had ties to outside groups closely allied with the most conservative elements of the Republican Party, such as theNational Rifle Association, The Heritage Foundation, Focus on the Family, Concerned Women for America and the conservative magazineNational Review, as well as the libertarian Cato Institute.

A subgroup of the committee, the Values Action Team, coordinates legislation with religious organizations, including the Christian right. It has been headed by Joe Pitts of Pennsylvania since its formation in 1997.

They’re not going to let this go. But as you can see, it’s only the true believer wingnuts who are on this thing — Democrats will not benefit one bit from caving. And if the Komen flap taught them anything at all, it should be that there is a large contingent of Americans who are unsympathetic to these anti-choice zealots. Sometimes you have to make a choice.

Clearly, this is going to be an ongoing battle. The argument is no longer about abortion. It’s also about birth control. This is no surprise to those of us who’ve been following this closely for a while. But the fog is starting to lift among the more mainstream observers. The question now is whether or not the right can succeed in making birth control one of those “controversial” icky issues that everyone is anxious to quickly find “common ground” on so we can turn to the “real” issues.
One would think that since birth control is something virtually everyone uses at some time in their lives, there wouldn’t be much of a question. But seeing what’s happened in other parts of the world where women’s rights are regressing with alarming speed I’m not all that sanguine. It’s only female trouble, after all. It’s not like it’s important.
.

The paranoid strain in our precious bodily fluids

Precious Bodily Fluids

by digby

Yeah, they’ve changed so much since then:

Across the country, activists with ties to the Tea Party are railing against all sorts of local and state efforts to control sprawl and conserve energy. They brand government action for things like expanding public transportation routes and preserving open space as part of a United Nations-led conspiracy to deny property rights and herd citizens toward cities.

They are showing up at planning meetings to denounce bike lanes on public streets and smart meters on home appliances — efforts they equate to a big-government blueprint against individual rights.

“Down the road, this data will be used against you,” warned one speaker at a recent Roanoke County, Va., Board of Supervisors meeting who turned out with dozens of people opposed to the county’s paying $1,200 in dues to a nonprofit that consults on sustainability issues.

Local officials say they would dismiss such notions except that the growing and often heated protests are having an effect.

In Maine, the Tea Party-backed Republican governor canceled a project to ease congestion along the Route 1 corridor after protesters complained it was part of the United Nations plot. Similar opposition helped doom a high-speed train line in Florida. And more than a dozen cities, towns and counties, under new pressure, have cut off financing for a program that offers expertise on how to measure and cut carbon emissions.

“It sounds a little on the weird side, but we’ve found we ignore it at our own peril,” said George Homewood, a vice president of the American Planning Association’s chapter in Virginia.

The protests date to 1992 when the United Nations passed a sweeping, but nonbinding, 100-plus-page resolution called Agenda 21 that was designed to encourage nations to use fewer resources and conserve open land by steering development to already dense areas. They have gained momentum in the past two years because of the emergence of the Tea Party movement, harnessing its suspicion about government power and belief that man-made global warming is a hoax

Lest you think these are just crackpots on the fringe:

In January, the Republican Party adopted its own resolution against what it called “the destructive and insidious nature” of Agenda 21. And Newt Gingrich took aim at it during a Republican debate in November.
[…]
Fox News has also helped spread the message. In June, after President Obama signed an executive order creating a White House Rural Council to “enhance federal engagement with rural communities,” Fox programs linked the order to Agenda 21. A Fox commentator, Eric Bolling, said the council sounded “eerily similar to a U.N. plan called Agenda 21, where a centralized planning agency would be responsible for oversight into all areas of our lives. A one world order.”

This is the paranoid strain at work. I suppose it wouldn’t be so harmful if the stakes weren’t so high. But this is more than an annoyance. The wingnut faction managed to get every GOP presidential candidate on the record as not believing in global warming.(Only 19% of Republicans believe that climate change is caused by human activity!) They may be crackpots but they have a controlling voice in one of the two major parties

And what about this local lunacy? This is the world envisioned by those who want to do away with the federal government. I’m guessing our water would have more than fluoride in it — probably typhoid, cholera and botulism for starters.

I’m not looking forward to our confederacy of dunces running things.

Update: And then there’s this:

.

Dirty Harry is a Commie

Dirty Harry is a Commie

by digby

There was a time when this message would be uncontroversial — just straight up All American patriotic commercialism. Now the wingnuts say it’s commie propaganda for the Kenyan usurper.

video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

Republicans are taking to their rooms and having a good old fashioned cry:

“I was, frankly, offended by it,” said Karl Rove on Fox News Monday. “I’m a huge fan of Clint Eastwood, I thought it was an extremely well-done ad, but it is a sign of what happens when you have Chicago-style politics, and the president of the United States and his political minions are, in essence, using our tax dollars to buy corporate advertising.”

Yeah whatever. Make my day, Aunt Pittypat.

.

Self-deportation: more liberty for the aliens

More liberty for the aliens

by digby

Howie has a great post up about the Alabama immigration law and “self-deportation.” (I’m not sure why it isn’t simply called ethnic cleansing, since that’s what it is.) He talks about the obvious historical echoes in this sort of thing and highlights a long piece about this from This American Life. Here’s an excerpt:

Jack Hitt:The law is so comprehensive that some officials seem to be overreaching, just to be on the safe side. An attorney told me about one guy being denied a jailhouse phone call, since use of the phone was considered a business transaction, and about a victim of domestic violence who was told by a judge that if she wanted a protective order, she might open herself up for deportation.

But what I found most surprising was that amid the chaos, regular Alabamians, here and there, were taking the law to heart, pursuing ad hoc immigration justice on their own. I met a young Costa Rican woman named Carolina who long ago overstayed her visa. She told me about a recent time at a grocery store checkout. She and her husband tried to pay for their food with a credit card and valid ID. The cashier refused them, saying they’d first have to show that they were here legally.

Carolina: I swear, they don’t want to sell us the groceries.

Jack Hitt: Carolina had just had a birthday when we met. And her mother back home had wired her some money to buy a gift, a money gram she could pick up at Walmart, not a government office, but a private business. So no problem. She’d done this many, many times in the nearly seven years she’s lived in Alabama. Before the law, all she had to do was show ID and type in the secret PIN number her mother had sent her. But this time…

Carolina: They did not give me the money. They just refused to give me the money, because I cannot prove to the girl that I was legal. And I don’t know why I have to prove her that.

Jack Hitt: Again, this is not part of the law.

The program also interviewed the GOP mastermind behind all these draconian anti-immigration laws around the country, Kris Kobach, Mitt Romney’s new bff. I thought this was particularly interesting in light of the above:

Jack Hitt: Kobach has been working on illegal immigration since 2001. His big insight came right after 9/11, when he was working for the Justice Department.

Kris Kobach: It was an a-ha moment when I realized that five of the 19 hijackers were in the country illegally. Four of those five had traffic violations while they were illegally in the country. And if the police officer had had that information at his fingertips, he could have made an arrest.

Jack Hitt: But cops don’t check for immigration status. Immigration agents do. The problem was, there were only a few thousand of them. Kobach realized what we need is what war planners call a force multiplier. What if we enlisted the more than 700,000 state and local law enforcement officers across the country into the fight against illegal immigration?

The simplicity of Kobach’s argument is what’s so appealing. He isn’t creating new policy at all. He’s simply empowering states to enforce what is already in the federal statutes.

Kris Kobach: And from the alien’s perspective, it’s better, too. He can depart the United States on his own, freely, without ever being in custody. And so there’s more liberty for him. And there’s less cost for the United States.

Jack Hitt: There’s less cost, because if someone self-deports, there’s no arrest. There’s no detention or immigration hearing. Attrition through enforcement sounds so rational, so clean, when Kobach explains it, like it’ll happen automatically. You don’t have to do much. They’ll just go.

But of course, the reality of self-deportation is much messier than that. You’re threatening to separate parents and kids, drive them from their homes. It’s completely primal, the things that terrify us most. And that is the actual plan, to scare them.

I asked Kobach, point by point, about the unintended consequences of the Alabama bill. He disputed everything. Did it hurt business? Did it create chaos in the schools? All overstated, he said. Finally, I asked him if it unearthed long-sequestered racial attitudes aimed at Latinos.

Kris Kobach: I think it’s really an argument of last resort. And that is, well, if you start enforcing immigration laws more aggressively, that’s going to become a racially charged issue. And my answer is, no, it’s not. I don’t buy it. And frankly, that hasn’t happened.

Cashiers asking for papers from people who are trying to buy groceries has no racial component. Sure it doesn’t.

The most interesting part of the piece is a GOP legislator who was confronted by a good Christian who runs a soup kitchen complaining that he was being asked to turn away people who were hungry and he just couldn’t do it. The legislator finally admitted that this probably wasn’t something Jesus would countenance. Imagine that.

Of course, Kris Kobach believes that by harassing people, separating families, driving them from their homes, he’s giving them more liberty. After all, he could be locking them up and throwing away the key. They must see how lucky they are to have him.

.

Gibberish Man by @DavidOAtkins

Gibberish Man

by David Atkins

Newt continues to go rogue:

Newt Gingrich said Sunday that an “age of austerity” is the wrong solution for the economy and would “punish” the American people. He said he prefers “pro-growth” policies instead. The comments appear to pour cold water on the modern Republican belief that austerity and growth go hand in hand.

The 2012 Republican presidential candidate was asked by NBC’s David Gregory on “Meet The Press” whether his hopes for a U.S. colony on the moon fly in the face of the GOP’s fiscal responsibility mantra. Gingrich responded with some choice words about austerity itself before defending his lunar ambitions.

“First of all, David, I don’t think you’ll ever find me talking about an age of austerity. I don’t think that’s the right solution,” Gingrich said. “I am a pro-growth Republican. I’m a pro-growth conservative. I think the answer is to grow the economy, not to punish the American people with austerity.”

I don’t even think Newt knows what he’s talking about at this point. His campaign has always been something of an ego-powered confidence game. Newt poses as a pseudo-intellectual, but there’s no substance behind it. He’s basically running ad hoc at this point, hoping he can outrun the last thing to come out of his mouth with sheer chutzpah.

It would be awesome to see a journalist follow up with Gingrich to see exactly what he means by these “pro-growth policies” without “austerity.” To a rational person, that means growing demand through increasing public investment, paid for in part by a tax system that forces the insanely wealthy to contribute their fair share while fixing the economy to reduce base inequality in the first place.

But I have no idea what it means for Gingrich. It could be very interesting for his “conservative” base to find out.

.

At least we know we’re free: except for journalists trying to cover congressional hearings

At least we know we’re free (well sometimes)

by digby

Well, this sure makes me proud to be an American:

In a stunning break with First Amendment policy, House Republicans directed Capitol Hill police to detain a highly regarded documentary crew that was attempting to film a Wednesday hearing on a controversial natural gas procurement practice. Initial reports from sources suggested that an ABC News camera was also prevented from taping the hearing; ABC has since denied that they sent a crew to the hearing.

Josh Fox, director of the Academy Award-nominated documentary “Gasland” was taken into custody by Capitol Hill police this morning, along with his crew, after Republicans objected to their presence, according to Democratic sources present at the hearing. The meeting of the House Subcommittee on Energy and Environment had been taking place in room 2318 of the Rayburn building.

HuffPost has obtained exclusive video of the arrest of Josh Fox. Rep. Brad Miller (D-N.C.), the ranking Democrat on the subcommittee, can be heard at the end of the clip asking Republican Chairman Andy Harris (R-Md.) to halt the arrest and permit Fox to film the public hearing. Harris denies Miller’s request as Fox is escorted out of the hearing in handcuffs.

Here’s Congressman Jerry Nadler:

“I have served in the House of Representatives since 1992, and I had the privilege of chairing the Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties. In all that time, I cannot recall a chair of any committee or subcommittee having ever ordered the removal of a person who was filming a committee proceeding and not being disruptive, whether or not that person was accredited. It is a matter of routine that all sorts of people photograph and record our proceedings. Most of them are not accredited. I cannot recall anyone questioning their right to be there.”

Hey fellow froggies — does this water feel like it’s getting hotter to you?

.

Komen in self-destruct mode by @DavidOAtkins

Komen in self-destruct mode

by David Atkins

This is nuts:

Yesterday, ThinkProgress exclusively reported Ari Fleischer’s involvement — dating back at least to December — with the Komen Foundation, including issues related to Planned Parenthood. Tonight, the Washington Post reports that Komen is now publicly confirming that Fleischer, a prominent right-wing pundit and former press secretary for George W. Bush, will help “on crisis communications” related to Planned Parenthood. Komen stressed that Fleischer, who is a long-time critic of Planned Parenthood, “had nothing to do with the funding decision.”

Ari Fleischer sounds like a great choice, since Phyllis Schlafly and Pat Robertson were apparently unavailable.

.