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Month: July 2013

Lib-Pop: “it simply makes no sense”

“It simply makes no sense”

by digby

Speaking of libertarian populism:

[R]ight-wing populism in America has always amounted to white identity politics, which is why the only notable libertarian-leaning politicians to generate real excitement among conservative voters have risen to prominence through alliances with racist and nativist movements. Ron Paul’s racist newsletters were not incidental to his later success, and it comes as little surprise that a man styling himself a “Southern Avenger” numbers among Rand Paul’s top aides. This is what actually-existing right-wing libertarian populism looks like, and that’s what it needs to look like if it is to remain popular, or right-wing. Second, political parties are coalitions of interests, and the Republican Party is the party of the rich, as well as the ideological champion of big business. A principled anti-corporatist, pro-working-class agenda stands as much chance in the GOP as a principled anti-public-sector-union stance in the Democratic Party. It simply makes no sense.

There’s a reason we see Republicans resort again and again to a fusion of racially-tinged American-nationalist Christian identity politics, empty libertarian rhetoric (an integral part of traditional white American identity), and the policy interests of high-tax-bracket voters. That’s what works! Well-meaning, libertarian-leaning, small-government conservatives must find this awfully frustrating. I find it frustrating. Yet it seems to me a plain fact that there is no significant electoral faction in American politics that demands the joint reduction of government and corporate power. A subset of libertarian ideas has functioned historically with some effectiveness as a stalking horse for white identity politics, which has brought a few authentic and salutary libertarian ideas to public attention, but the integrated principled substance of the libertarian philosophy has never been very popular. Moreover, if it is ever to becomes truly popular—and I very much doubt it will—it won’t be on the right.

I couldn’t agree more. Right wing populism is, by definition, about nativism and white supremacy. I don’t know who they are going to bring into their tent with that appeal who isn’t already in there. (There’s also a subset of libertarians who believe that crapola, but they’re already in that tent too …)

Also too, this

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Bachman and the pleasure object

Bachman and the pleasure object

by digby

What happens when a conservative Christian consulting firm melts down? This happens:

And an email thread from May 29 — after the three managers were fired — featured Strategy Group’s former voter-contact consultant P.J. Wenzel making reference to Elsass sending “female pleasure machines” to Bachmann. The emails don’t elaborate on the incident, but one person familiar with the story told BuzzFeed that Elsass had intended to give Bachmann a vibrating head massager to help alleviate her migraines, and that the employee he sent to buy the gift accidentally purchased something that more closely resembled a sex toy — and sent it to her office.

Tyler said the item in question was purchased at Brookstone and was not a sex toy, but he declined to provide further information about the product. (Brookstone announced in 2011 that it had begun selling “pleasure objects.”)

The person familiar with the story said the firm successfully retrieved the gift before Bachmann could open it.

I’m going to be contemplating that all day.

Read the whole story. When conservative Christians go sideways they really go sideways.

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Nah, there’s no need for the voting rights act

Nah, there’s no need for the voting rights act

by digby

After all, nobody’s trying to suppress the vote or anything:

The head of the Pennsylvania Republican Party admitted earlier this week that controversy surrounding the state’s voter identification law prevented President Barack Obama from claiming a larger margin of victory there in last year’s election.

Pennsylvania GOP Chairman Rob Gleason’s comments came Wednesday during an interview with the Pennsylvania Cable Network. He was asked if the attention generated by the new law, which wasn’t in effect last November, had an effect on the election.

“Yeah, I think a little bit. We probably had a better election. Think about this, we cut Obama by five percent, which was big. A lot of people lost sight of that. He won, he beat McCain by 10 percent, he only beat Romney by five percent. I think that probably voter ID helped a bit in that.”

I’m sure it did.

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The neocon vs libertarian war will be fun, by @DavidOAtkins

The neocon vs libertarian war will be fun

by David Atkins

In one corner, the neocons. In the other, the libertarians. Round 1, fight!

Rep. Peter King says he’s considering a run for president because someone needs to counteract forces in the Republican Party, singling out Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul.

“I’ve said I certainly would consider the race and the main reason right now is to shift the debate. It bothers me when the leading Republicans out there, someone like Rand Paul, seem more concerned about an American being killed in Starbucks by a CIA drone than he is about Islamic terrorism,” the New York Republican said Friday morning on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.”

King acknowledged he was considering a run on Thursday after a conservative website floated his potential bid.

Popcorn. That’s all I ask. Lots of popcorn.

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They never said we wouldn’t get our hair mussed

They never said we wouldn’t get our hair mussed

by digby

Hey, it’s not really that many innocent people on death row, right?

A review of death penalty convictions by the federal government has turned up 27 instances in which “exaggerated scientific testimony” from FBI forensics experts may have played a role. It’s unclear how many times such testimony led to false convictions or could nullify correct convictions the Washington Post reports. However the assessment did lead to a last minute stay of execution in May.

The testimony is the “once-widespread practice” where experts said that hair found at crime scenes could be used to identify suspects:

Since at least the 1970s, written FBI Laboratory reports typically stated that a hair association could not be used as positive identification. However, on the witness stand, several agents for years went beyond the science and testified that their hair analysis was a near-certain match.

A college professor told me many years ago that we needed the death penalty and that we just have to accept that a few innocent people were going to be killed along with the guilty.  And I guess we must have. Because no sentient being can possibly believe that our justice system only convicts guilty people. It’s ridiculous on its face.

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More tax cuts for the rich. Because, why not? by @DavidOAtkins

More tax cuts for the rich. Because, why not?

by David Atkins

It takes a very special kind of person to look at America today with record income inequality, roaring stock markets, low wages and high unemployment, and conclude that we need more tax cuts for rich people. It takes an even more special person to believe that taxes need to go up on the poor and middle class. But then, Republicans generally and Ohio Governor John Kasich in particular are very special people:

Gov. John Kasich (R) wants to get the top income tax rate in Ohio down below 5 percent, Cincinnati.com reported Thursday. The speech came 18 days after Kasich signed a budget that gives top earners in the Buckeye State a $6,000 per-person tax cut while raising the burden faced by the poorest 20 percent of the state.

The new budget took the state’s income tax rates down by 10 percent across the board, but features a 4.5 percent hike to sales taxes that disproportionately impact the poor. The Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy analyzed the plan and found that it cuts the overall tax burden of the top 1 percent of Ohio earners by $6,083 per year. That group includes people making over $335,000 annually. Folks in the $33,000 to $51,000 earnings range, the middle of Ohio’s spectrum, will see just a $9 tax cut. And for the poorest fifth who earn less than $18,000 per year, taxes are going to go up by $12. That increased tax burden on the poor comes despite a new credit targeted at low earners, and other tweaks to Kasich’s even more regressive original proposal.

Keep in mind, if John Kasich and friends were just trying to make the rich richer, it would suffice to cut taxes on the wealthy and then cut social services to make up for it. That would be evil, but rationally self-interested evil.

But the desire to raise taxes by small margins on poor people isn’t rational self-interest. It’s religious ideology. It’s based on a creed that poor people are undeserving moochers who deserve extra punishment.

You can’t reason with people like this, and you can’t compromise with them. They see the world in very special ways that make them unwilling to engage in even the most basic agreements with rational, empathetic people. Any “compromise” with the likes of John Kasich is by definition immoral. They have to be defeated at the ballot box.

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The nativists are restless

The nativists are restless

by digby

Trouble is brewing. Stay away from these areas. This is the latest list of locations for the Trayvon Martin protests against white gun owners, American courts, jury verdicts, and the Rule of Law.

All Americans please avoid these areas on Saturday July 20 as the likelihood of violence and property destruction are very high based on events like these seen in several states!

PLEASE TAKE ALL APPROPRIATE AND LEGAL STEPS TO PROTECT AND PROVISION YOUR FAMILIES DUE TO THE HIGH PROBABILITY OF NATIONAL CIVIL UNREST CAUSED BY AL SHARPTON.

They’re so upset that there hasn’t been riots. I’m going to guess they might just have a tantrum. Or start one.

Here’s a sampling of the comments:

What happens if we go and stand apart from them as ANTI-PROTESTERS carrying? Is self-defense and “Stand Your Ground” (in applicable states, of course) still applicable? I mean we “carry” for self=protection, right? And, if we don’t start any shit, there won’t be none, right?

Just saw obama the instigator on TV. Instead of warning the gangsters not to riot, he empathized with Black males and in essence condoned their violence. If I were a Black male and listened to his “speech”, I would feel compelled to take to the streets and act out violently. At 12% of the population, this idiot is advocating a race war and the annihilation of his people.

THE LAST DEMONSTRATION I SAW I FELT SORRY FOR THE BLACKS. THEY LOOKED LIKE A HERD OF CATTLE BEING GUIDED AND CONTROLLED BY WHITE COLLEGE OCCUPY COMMUNISTS.

This is from a group called the Nation Liberty Foundation. You can look it up.

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A Neocon for Homeland Security?

A Neocon for Homeland Security?

by digby

This piece by Ta-Nehisi Coates says it all about the inexplicable floating of Ray Kelly for the Department of Homeland Security:

In his 2006 book “The Audacity of Hope,” the future president wrote that he could “recite the usual litany of petty slights” directed at him because of his skin color, including being profiled by the police. “I know what it’s like to have people tell me I can’t do something because of my color,” he wrote. “And I know the bitter swill of swallowed-back anger.” That same bitterness probably compelled Obama, as president, to speak out after Prof. Henry Louis Gates of Harvard was arrested, and to famously note last year, “If I had a son, he’d look like Trayvon.”

That is why it is hard to comprehend the thinking that compelled the president, in a week like this, to flirt with the possibility of inviting the New York City Police Commissioner, Ray Kelly, the proprietor of the largest local racial profiling operation in the country, into his cabinet.

Kelly’s name has been floated by New York politicians of both parties as the ideal replacement for Janet Napolitano, who resigned last week. The president responded by calling Kelly “well-qualified” and an “outstanding leader in New York.” He sounded a pitch for bringing the commissioner into the White House’s fold.

“Mr. Kelly might be very happy where he is,” said the president. “But if he’s not, I’d want to know about it.”

There are some other things that the president should want to know about. Chief among them would be how his laudatory words for Kelly square with the commissioner’s practices and with the president’s deepest commitments.

The N.Y.P.D.’s stop-and-frisk program has been well-covered in this newspaper and elsewhere. It is now public knowledge that the police department, each year, stops hundreds of thousands of citizens, largely black and Latino men, for reasons as thin and subjective as “furtive movements.” Very few of those stops lead to actual charges, much less arrests, and according to the commissioner that’s fine.

“If you don’t run the risk of being stopped, you start carrying your gun, and you do things that people do with guns,” Kelly recently told The Wall Street Journal.

Another stalwart for the constitution. By all means let’s give him a hige federal agency with unlimited funds to play with. What could go wrong?

Well, we know one thing for sure. He won’t be inclined to release any reports about homegrown right wingers like Napolitano foolishly did:

[T]here’s an incident from the past few years that showed a deeper side of Kelly’s brushes with the Isalmophobic fringes: his participation in and department’s poor and repeatedly misleading involvement with the film “The Third Jihad.” Kelly appeared in an exclusive interview for the film, which was shown widely during police trainings—both facts his department falsely denied and which he has never forthrightly dealt with.

“The Third Jihad” was produced by a shadowy non-profit called the Clarion Fund, which now calls itself the Clarion Project. Founded in the mid-2000s, Clarion’s best known for producing films that portray Islam in a negative light and implicitly advocate for hawkish policies like going to war with Iran. (Clarion also runs a website.) Spearheaded by an Israeli-Canadian and closely linked with an Israeli-based Orthodox evangelist group called Aish Hatorah—which the journalist Jeffrey Goldberg described as “Jewish extremists”—Clarion’s advisers include a who’s who of America’s most prominent Islamophobes, including Frank Gaffney and Daniel Pipes, as well as lesser-known anti-Muslim activists like Harold Rhode. (It’s “Iranium” documentary was written and directed by an ideological Israeli settler in the West Bank.)

In 2009, Clarion released “The Third Jihad,” the second of its three feature length documentaries, which purports to outline the threat to the U.S. by an insidious Muslim Brotherhood takeover plot. Enter the NYPD, and it’s deception about the film. In a front page story, the New York Times reported last January:

In January 2011, when news broke that the department had used the film in training, a top police official denied it, then said it had been mistakenly screened “a couple of times” for a few officers.

A year later, police documents obtained under the state’s Freedom of Information Law reveal a different reality: “The Third Jihad,” which includes an interview with Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly, was shown, according to internal police reports, “on a continuous loop” for between three months and one year of training.

In the Times story, a top aide to Kelly, Paul Browne, denied that the commissioner had sat down with the filmmakers and instead said they “lifted the clip from an old interview.” But a follow-up story the next day, the Times revealed that Kelly’s aide had misled the paper about both his and commissioner’s role in the film:

On Tuesday, the film’s producer, Raphael Shore, e-mailed The Times and provided a date and time for their 90-minute interview with the commissioner at Police Headquarters on March 19, 2007. Told of this e-mail, Mr. Browne revised his account. “He’s right,” Mr. Browne said Tuesday of the producer. “In fact, I recommended in February 2007 that Commissioner Kelly be interviewed.”

In an e-mail, Mr. Browne said that when he first saw the film in 2011, he assumed the commissioner’s interview was taken from old clips, even though the film referred to Mr. Kelly as an “interviewee.” He did not offer an explanation as to why he and the commissioner, on Tuesday, remembered so much of their decision.

The Police Department’s admission suggests a closer relationship between it and the provocative film, which has drawn angry condemnation from Muslim and civil rights groups, than officials had previously acknowledged.

It also shows a truly dangerous relationship between Ray Kelly and the nuttiest of neocon freaks.

Kelly shouldn’t even be considered in passing because of his heinously bigoted stop and frisk policy. But dabbling in the neocon swamp completely disqualifies him for anything remotely associated with anti-terrorism policy. Remember: this is their credo:

Anyone can go to Baghdad. Real men go to Tehran

This person shouldn’t be anywhere near a national police agency charged with monitoring terrorism. Who knows what his agenda is?

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Not laughing anymore: a court finds a for-profit company can claim religious liberty

Not laughing anymore: a court finds a for-profit company can claim religious liberty

by digby

You’ll all recall the brouhaha over religious institutions being required to provide contraception coverage. The administration compromised and the issue seemed to go away. But it didn’t. Sarah Posner has been following the story of arts-and-crafts chain Hobby Lobby and its quest to claim that these provisions of the ACA violate its freedom of religion:

In February of 2012, as the Obama administration sought to placate the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ (USCCB) objections to contraception coverage under the Affordable Care Act, a new wrinkle in the debate took observers by surprise. Anthony Picarello, the USCCB’s general counsel, protested that exemptions and accommodations for churches and religious charities didn’t go far enough. “If I quit this job and opened a Taco Bell,” Picarello said, “I’d be covered by the mandate.”

This was the first time one of the religious objectors to the proposed regulation had raised the prospect of an exemption for for-profit, corporate entities. “We thought it was laughable at the time,” says Louise Melling, deputy legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which has filed amicus briefs in support of the government’s position in lawsuits later brought by for-profit companies. “I’m not laughing anymore.”

Last month, in the first appellate decision in these cases, the Tenth Circuit ruled in favor of arts-and-crafts chain Hobby Lobby and its affiliated chain of Christian bookstores, Mardel. The court found that corporations have the standing to sue under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), and have free-exercise rights under the First Amendment. “A religious individual may enter the for-profit realm intending to demonstrate to the marketplace that a corporation can succeed financially while adhering to religious values,” a majority of the court’s full en banc panel of eight judges wrote. “As a court, we do not see how we can distinguish this form of evangelism from any other.”

Read the whole piece to get the full flavor of the implications here. This will undoubtedly go to the Supreme Court but the principle at play is quite disturbing. If the owners of private companies can claim a “religious liberty” exemption for federal laws they believe violate their beliefs we are opening up a huge can of worms. And from what we’ve seen, this is exactly the kind of case that makes Justice John Roberts twirl his (metaphorical) mustache.

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