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Month: July 2014

Big babies screaming at little children complain about being misunderstood

Big babies screaming at little children complain about being misunderstood

by digby

Apparently, showing footage of people spitting in others’ faces and screaming in rage at mothers with little children makes those people look bad. Who would have thought?

The mayor of Murrieta California:

On Thursday, Long told Fox News video the protests that he had inspired did not show the true “compassion” of his town.

“I took the opportunity last night to remind everyone that, you know, showing clips of angry people really isn’t a true reflection of Murrieta,” he insisted. “There is another opposing side to this that is just as angry, and I think if you talk to them, they would agree that they want an efficient process.”

“We’ve heard some of those passionate people seeing the clips on the news and coming to a conclusion that Murrieta’s not compassionate,” Long added. “It’s a shame that two minutes of video time on the news channel really stereotypes our city.”

It’s true that some of the “opponents” were red in the face and screaming at the top of their lungs. They were actual infants.

One good way to not be stereotyped as a town full of total assholes is for the mayor not to incite his townspeople to act like total assholes. The funny thing is that the footage he’s decrying as being unrepresentative were shown on a loop on Fox News with the anchors cheering on the assholishness.

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The xenophobes in Murrieta are getting worse–with consequences for the GOP, by @DavidOAtkins

The xenophobes in Murrieta are getting worse–with consequences for the GOP

by David Atkins

In addition to screaming at busloads of young children, the xenophobes in Murrieta are also passing this around:

Dengue fever! Leprosy!

Eclectablog has some appropriate commentary about the long-term consequences of this sort of thing:

Republicans killed immigration reform after forging a bipartisan Senate bill that cost one of its party’s most promising saviors most of his luster. And now it’s saying that Obama is purposely creating a disaster at the border as migrant children flood up from Central America, fleeing one humanitarian crisis and creating another one America cannot ignore.

Images of crowds yelling at young Latino refugees will be tough to forget.

To make sure their animosity to reform is clear, House Republicans have passed two bills calling for the deportation of DREAMers — even after the House Leadership signaled it was for legalization last year. And when President Obama unveils new executive actions likely designed to keep families and long-term, productive residents in the country, expect a massive conservative backlash.

House Democrats have renewed their charge to get 27 Republicans to sign discharge petition that would bring the Senate’s bill to the floor — or make those members pay for not doing so.

To anyone who is paying attention, 2014 looks a lot like 1994 did in California when Republican Governor Pete Wilson was re-elected by running an anti-immigrant campaign fueled by his support of the now reviled Prop 187. It was good politics at the time and the way it alienated the state’s growing Latino vote turned Republicans into a larger third-party in California.

Republican hopes of expanding the Senate map with hundreds of millions of dollars of Koch money are disappearing in Michigan and New Hampshire, as they likely will soon in Colorado and Iowa. They need to win in red states like Arkansas, Alaska, and Louisiana to take the Senate — and those races are all toss ups.

President Obama’s approval rating lingers around 43 percent and he’s faced with real crises on the border and in Iraq.

But in just six months more than 10 million Americans have gained health insurance and nearly 1.4 million jobs have been created. We’re now in the 52nd straight month of private sector job growth. Predictions about Obamacare’s failure are being replaced with the reality of dealing with tens of million of Americans who rely on the law for coverage. And the ancillary fights to take away birth control coverage just remind women what a victory health care reform is for them.

Meanwhile, the GOP’s lingering unpopularity is nearly unprecedented. And its decisions to go full throttle with the policies that cost them the presidency in 2012 will not be forgotten.

Markos Moulitsas pointed out earlier that on issues like immigration and birth control, Republicans aren’t gaining ground so much as taking rearguard actions against a rising tide that threatens to destroy them. Yes, on matters of inequality, economics, privacy and war the GOP is still all too healthy and there are far too many Democrats also doing their bidding. But Republicans are losing the culture wars badly–so badly that their control of the economic paradigm may well crumble alongside them so long as progressives hold the Democratic Party accountable to its platform and professed values.

The demise of the GOP can be overhyped, of course. They have a lot of money and gerrymandered districts. But that’s also a cause for complacency on their part that could see them overlook their structural weaknesses and end up wandering in the wilderness for quite some time beginning as early as 2016 or 2020.

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Just saying

Just saying

by digby

Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame,
With conquering limbs astride from land to land;
Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand
A mighty woman with a torch, whose flame
Is the imprisoned lightning, and her name
Mother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand
Glows world-wide welcome; her mild eyes command
The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame.
“Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!” cries she
With silent lips. “Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!” —
Emma Lazarus, 1883

Free at last

Free at last

by digby

Pity the poor white male. He is oppressed:

When C-SPAN invited viewers on Thursday to offer their thoughts on the 50th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act, a handful of individuals used the opportunity to lament white oppression.

“Washington Journal” host Steve Scully listened as an “independent” caller named Thomas from Maryland told him that he is “much less liberal today” than he was in 1964 when the landmark law was signed by Lyndon B. Johnson.

“And I think the blacks have brought on most of their present-day problems themselves. They insult white people,” he told Scully. “I heard it right on your own show, I heard some black call Karl Rove a ‘white boy.’ And I don’t think that’s right. They’re attacking white people in the big cities and we’re supposed to put up with that kind of stuff and like them and say, ‘Well, come into our neighborhood.’ And how about the discussion of the black crime that goes on in this country?”

The caller went on to complain that the discrimination endured by Irish, Mormons and Italians is widely ignored.

“You people will never, never discuss that. You only discuss the discrimination against the black people,” he said.

Scully asked the caller if he had faced discrimination himself.

“Yes, I have felt discrimination in my life. Yes, because I am of Irish descent I have felt it,” he said.

Later, Scully read a tweet from Danny who said that the “racists are those who set out to destroy the nation’s white identity, that is racist.”

And Scully eventually heard from two consecutive callers who each said that white guys are getting a bum rap. First up was Joe in Ohio, who said there is a “war on white men in this country from liberal white women that claim there is a war against women.”

“No country has ever created more things for the betterment of mankind’s living than the caucasian race that came from Europe and I’m sick and tired as an octogenarian hearing all this bad-mouthing of white people,” he said.

He continued:

“And I think it’s time for white men to start standing up because there’s all kinds of groups for other races. And I think it’s time for white pride. We have built this country — Irish, Italians, Germans…Irish, wherever they have come from in Europe. No country in the world has produced what the white man has produced for every culture and race in America.”

Immediately after that call, Terry in North Carolina phoned-in to say he agreed.

“I’m kind of like that last guy. The white man has done more for the black man in this country — I think the black man owes the white man a thank you,” he said.

“OK, Terry from North Carolina,” Scully said.

Whatever you do don’t mention that “the black man” has been “building America” from the very beginning, much of it under — shall we say — less than optimal labor conditions.

It’s a sad time for racist white guys. Nobody like ’em.

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The mainstreaming of the “T” word

The mainstreaming of the “T” word


by digby

I was struck this past week by the fact that it’s apparently ok now to use the word “Taliban” to describe some of the ultra right wing Christian fundamentalists. Even The New Yorker went there:

Such headlines were considered way beyond the pale back when Markos Moulitzas wrote his book called “American Taliban” and the liberal cognoscenti all called for the smelling salts. And that was nothing to the full blown hissy fit the political establishment had over Alan Grayson’s ad referring to his opponent Daniel Webster as “Taliban Dan.”

I wrote a lot about all this in the past, but I think this is pertinent today since as David Corn reports, the owners of the Hobby Lobby corporation are also followers of the same corrupt fundamentalist preacher as Webster — a man by the name of Bill Gothard.

Anyway, here’s a piece from 2011 about the problem of failing to properly acknowledge the influence of these extremists in our midst:

Thursday, February 10, 2011


The “T” word

by digby

Here’s a headline for you:

Alan Grayson Vindicated in ‘Taliban Dan’ Claim — By Religious Right Leaders and Former Activists

That’s from Adele Stan’s article in Alternet about Sarah Posner’s blockbuster piece this week in Religion Dispatches about Bill Gothard — Daniel Webster’s mentor and spiritual leader. Stan explains:

No less a source than FactCheck.org condemned Grayson for the ad, saying that Webster’s words, made during remarks to one of Gothard’s organizations, were taken out of context. Grayson’s ad featured a clip of Webster saying, “Wives submit to your husbands.” While the admakers unwisely edited the video of Webster’s speech to suggest that was his own instruction (in reality, he was telling husbands that, when reading the Bible with their wives, to skip over those parts), a new report at Religion Dispatches by Sarah Posner makes clear that wifely submission — even in the face of abuse — is precisely the teaching given to Gothard’s followers, who include Webster.

At the time Grayson ran the ad, people all over the political spectrum were in a tizzy about using the word “Taliban” because it was outrageous to even suggest that Americans could be as primitive as those Islamic fundamentalists who still stone women for adultery. There was plenty of scholarship showing Webster’s mentor Bill Gothard’s affiliation with groups that had once called for capital punishment for gays and adulterers, and there was a ton of evidence that he personally belonged to a patriarchal cult that sits at the very fringe of American religious life.

But that was that. Grayson didn’t lose because of the ad, of course. He was in a Republican district in a Republican wave year and the shadowy conservative groups unleashed millions of dollars worth of ads against him. In his neighboring district, Suzanne Kosmas, a very polite, conservative Democrat who voted against virtually every Democratic initiative lost by a similar margin, so Grayson’s allegedly improper behavior was not the determining factor in his loss. But it is now a matter of political urban legend that this ad cost him his seat and it’s really too bad because it means that fundamentalists like Webster can never be called out on their religious views even when those religious views are totally out of the mainstream.

I wrote a lot about Bill Gothard and the religious right’s influence on the Republican Party during that election because I think these people are dangerous. And I think the assault on women’s rights we are seeing from this Republican congress bears out those fears.It is simply not true that the Tea Party is “libertarian.” They are anti-tax and anti-redistribution (for everyone but themselves) but they are very definitely in favor of using the full power of the state to inflict their religious moral views on others. And when it comes to Daniel Webster and some of the others, I would suggest that that moral view falls closer on the spectrum to Mullah Omar than it does to me.

Posner’s piece is amazing. She interviews ex-members of Gothard’s sect and other religious right leaders who reveal that he is beyond the pale even by the usual religious right standards — and that’s saying something. In interviews with evangelical scholars it becomes clear that Gothard holds extreme pre-modern patriarchal views: “It’s a culture of fear, is what it is.” Fear for women and children.

Those of you who may have seen The Duggars on their TLC reality show probably know that they are followers of The Quiverful movement which demands that women breed indiscriminately (thus resulting in Michelle personally bearing 19 children.) They are also followers of Bill Gothard, but the happy picture they create on their reality show doesn’t jibe with the stories of women who were in abusive marriages under Gothards strictures. Maybe Jim-Bob isn’t abusive toward Michelle, but if he were, Michelle would be required to bear it anyway. Not that she would have the energy to get out what with 19 children and all. Posner writes about one woman who escaped:

“Eliza,” now in her late 30s, was exposed to Gothard’s teachings her whole life, through her parents’ homeschool materials and attendance at Gothard conferences. She attended ATI conferences with her family from the time she was 12 until just two years ago. In the ATI courses, she said, Gothard’s teachings became more “wacky.”

ATI provides both homeschool materials and training courses all over the world on wide-ranging topics, including law, landscaping, music, food service, interior design, and “eternity arts.” But it’s in the gender-separated seminars that Gothard’s vision for women becomes clear: they are taught how to “radiate the brightness of the Lord Jesus Christ through their thoughts, words, and actions,” become “virtuous women,” and recognize the importance of “falling in love with the Lord, accepting your design and realizing your unique gifts.” Gothard, who teaches that dating is wrong, and that couples should engage instead in “courtship,” maintains “the purpose of courtship is to determine a couple’s readiness for marriage and to discern the will of God for a covenant marriage that will benefit the world.”

Many ATI conferences last for days or weeks at a time. Eliza said, “I didn’t realize you could control people’s minds by sleep deprivation, lack of good food, and pumping way too much information as they could pump into them without giving them time to think… You’ve got kids there for goodness sake!”

ATI families “basically ate, breathed, lived, and slept ATI and Mr. Gothard,” said Jack.

Among other things, Eliza said, Gothard would not permit boys and girls to talk to each other, demanded a strict dress code, taught that girls should never run, and demanded that girls style their hair wavy—not straight or curly—because “wavy hair is attractive and becoming—it causes you to focus on the woman’s face instead of her body.” Gothard’s approved wavy hairstyle is meant, she said, “to attract men to your bright eyes, which will attract them to God, instead of your body.”

Eliza elaborated on how she was required to live under her father’s authority, even in adulthood. “Girls should be serving their fathers and at times they should do ministry things under their father’s direction—while they were single,” she said. “Make the most of your single years to serve God.” She remains single, something she attributes in part to her parents’ adherence to Gothard’s teachings.

As a result, she said, she never attended college (she had been educated in Christian schools until fifth grade and homeschooled for the duration of her education) and never learned skills with which she could earn a living for herself. Gothard discouraged college, she said, because he said parents shouldn’t expose their children to “alternative philosophies.” Women were expected to be under their fathers’ “authority” until marriage; because she wasn’t interested in marriage, she remained at home until very recently, but said that not being able to earn a living for herself “at this stage of my life is very scary.”

Gothard, who has never been married, teaches that dating is prohibited (a rule echoed by the Duggars on their television show) “because you’ll give away too much of your heart.” As the blogger Hopewell wrote on Garrison’s blog, the Duggars “view dating as unhealthy, leading to a diminished capacity to love your eventual spouse… They view adulthood as something that begins with a parent-approved marriage and at no other time.”

Gothard’s ATI is the largest distributor of homeschooling material in the US:

2003–1,096,000 estimated homeschool children K-12, a 29% increase from 1999 which showed 850,000 students (general population increased only 1%) (NCES)

2007-2008–2.0 to 2.5 million homeschooled students K-12 (NHERI)
Home education grows about 5-12% per year(NHERI)

I am told by many liberals that it’s wrong to be concerned about the fact that Daniel Webster is one of the most powerful people in the nation. Or that others like him, including Jim Bob Duggar, are in politics. And I just can’t go along with that. As far as I’m concerned it’s the same thing as ignoring the rise of the Taliban back in the 1990s, when people like Grover Norquist and Dana Rohrabacher were extolling their virtues as men of God who were bringing order to chaos in Afghanistan while women’s rights groups like RAWA were desperately trying to get the word out about the repression of women. We were told that women’s rights have different cultural meanings and that it was inappropriate to be concerned. I don’t think that worked out very well.

The fact is that women’s rights are human rights and when patriarchal religious fundamentalists of any stripe become political everyone should be concerned, because it isn’t “just about women” (although that’s an offensive way to think about it in itself) it’s about men too. These people are authoritarians and should be exposed for what they are.

Grayson tried to do that and used the “T” word, which is out of bounds because apparently Americans can never be compared to anything evil, whether historical or contemporary, even if the analogy is extremely apt. He got hammered not only for being imprecise in his ad but for taking on his opponents fringe religious views at all. I’m sure it was noted by other politicians and it will be a cold day in hell before anyone does it again. And that’s too bad because Grayson was right. Webster is a member of a fringe, patriarchal cult that is as far out of the Christian mainstream as the Taliban is outside the mainstream of Islam which gained power through their political efforts. Let’s hope the Christian Reconstructionists in the Tea Party (and there are many) don’t have similar success. It may be unlikely but the fact that it’s becoming increasingly impossible to even talk about this in real terms means I doubt anyone would even know it’s happened until after the fact.

I urge you to read Posner’s whole article. It’s fascinating and important:“Taliban Dan’s” Teacher: Inside Bill Gothard’s Authoritarian Subculture

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Songs of the 4th

Songs of the 4th

by digby

America — Fuck yeah:

It looks like California and Florida aren’t taking this thing seriously enough…

I always post the official LA 4th of July song from X:

Here’s the soulful version from Dave Alvin:

Happy Independence Day everybody!
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Mayday in July

Mayday in July

by digby

I don’t know if this will work, but it’s worth a try:

It will probably take a combination of democracy and state action, pitchforks and billionaire on billionaire cage matches to fix this problem. And even then, it’s daunting. But you’ve got to try …

Here’s the website if you’re interested. They’re looking for a 5 million dollar match which has to come in by the end of the day …

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Next time someone tells you we just need to convince more people… by @DavidOAtkins

Next time someone tells you we just need to convince more people…

by David Atkins

It’s a less common refrain these days, but you’ll still hear a lot of progressives talk about the need to convince more voters that we’re right and conservatives are wrong. Next time you hear that, remind them of this:

Ninety-two percent of voters, including 92 percent of gun owners and 86 percent of Republicans, support background checks prior to all gun sales, according to a new poll from Quinnipiac University.

The results indicate that, while the proposed shift to universal background checks has stirred intense partisan bickering inside the Beltway, it’s not nearly as controversial throughout the rest of the country.

Supporters of tougher gun laws were quick to highlight the results, calling on House Republican leaders to take up legislation expanding background screenings to all commercial gun sales.
Rep. Mike Thompson (Calif.), a gun owner who heads the House Democratic task force on gun violence, urged GOP leaders to consider his bill to do just that.

“The only thing standing in the way of it passing is the Republican Majority in the House,” Thompson said in a statement. “It’s time they listen to the 92 percent of American gun owners who support background checks and bring our bill up for a vote — because if the Republican Majority would allow a vote, my bill would pass.”

He shouldn’t hold his breath.

Legislation doesn’t work that way. A bill with 70% public support isn’t necessarily any more likely to pass than one with 50% public support.

What matters isn’t what the public believes. What matters is the issues that the public is willing to get out and vote for. By and large, people don’t care badly enough about gun control to throw out legislators who don’t do what they want. But the small minority of gun nuts do care very badly–and they get out and vote in partisan primaries with that same passion.

It’s not about getting people to agree with you. It’s about getting people passionate enough to do something about it.

And those who don’t even bother to vote? Well, they’re not even part of the conversation or the equation.

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The hits just keep on coming

The hits just keep on coming

by digby

Ohfercryingoutloud:

A divided Supreme Court has agreed to allow an evangelical college in Illinois that objects to paying for contraceptives in its health plan to avoid filling out a government document that the college says would violate its religious beliefs.

The justices said Thursday that Wheaton College does not have to fill out the contested form while its case is on appeal but can instead write the Department of Health and Human Services declaring that it is a religious nonprofit organization and making its objection to birth control.

Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor said they would have denied Wheaton’s request and made the college fill out a form that enables their insurers or third-party administrators to take on the responsibility of paying for the birth control.

Right. Filling out a form is right up there with the Spanish Inquisition.

Is there anyone left who doesn’t understand that the social conservatives are really, truly, cross their hearts, seriously opposed to birth control (also known as women having sex for pleasure?)

Here, let me have Rick Santorum explain for you what these people are really all about:

One of the things I will talk about that no president has talked about before is what I think is the danger of contraception. The whole sexual libertine idea that many in the Christian faith have said, well, it’s ok, contraception’s ok. But it’s not ok.

It’s a license to do things in the sexual realm that is counter to how things are supposed to be. It is supposed to be within marriage. It is supposed to be for purposes that are yes, conjugal and also unitive but also procreative and that’s the perfect way that sexual union should happen. When you take any part of that out, we diminish the act.

If you can take one part out, if it’s not for the purpose of procreation, that’s not one of the reasons you diminish this very special bond between men and women. So why can’t you take other parts of it out? It becomes deconstructed to the point where it’s simply pleasure…

I’m not runnning for preacher, I’m not running for pastor. But these are important public policy issues. These have profound impact on the health of our society. I’m not talking about moral health, although clearly moral health, but I’m talking economic health, I’m talking about out of wedlock birth rates, sexually transmitted diseases.

These are profound issues that we only like to talk about from a scientific point of view. Well that’s one point of view, but we also need to have the courage to talk about the moral aspects of it and the purpose and rationale for why we do what we do.

If you work for someone who believes what Rick Santorum believes, you’re just screwed (and not in the good way.) His beliefs are more important than yours, that’s all there is to it. They’re so important he cannot even be asked to fill out a form telling the government how important they are.

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The Tea Party won in Mississippi anyway, by @DavidOAtkins

The Tea Party won in Mississippi anyway

by David Atkins

A while back at Salon I argued that conservatives move the country to the Right effectively by contesting primaries, while liberals all too often leave the field entirely when they get discouraged.

Paul Waldman today takes the point further by noting that the conservative crazies succeed even when they don’t win:

Chris McDaniel wanted to go to the Senate, and the people who supported him wanted that, too. But just by making the runoff, McDaniel served his purpose for the tea party, which was to maintain the appropriate level of fear among Republican elected officials. After some primaries in which Republicans easily dispatched challenges from the right, Eric Cantor’s loss and Cochran’s near-loss have put the fear of the right back into Republicans in Congress. So for the tea party, it’s mission accomplished. At this point, the tiny chance that McDaniel might actually prevail in a lawsuit doesn’t make it worth their while to fight for, particularly given that the longer he keeps up this battle, the crazier he looks — and by extension, the less reasonable he makes his supporters look.

I’m not saying that everything is about appearances for the tea party and that they don’t have policy goals, because they do. But they understand that electing committed tea partiers is only one way to achieve those goals. Keeping ordinary Republicans terrified is another way, and almost as effective.

Before you accuse me of giving them too much credit, I also understand that the tea party’s policy goals almost never get accomplished, and failure doesn’t necessarily harm them. Each failure — a lost election, a government shutdown that ends, a budget that gets passed — can be cast as a betrayal, maintaining the urgency of the crusade. But part of the movement’s power comes from the fact that it isn’t dependent on any one leader or even a group of leaders. A politician whom tea partiers love today can easily be cast aside if he shows glimmers of reasonableness tomorrow, as Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) was after he began working on immigration reform. (It may be hard to remember now, but when Rubio got elected in 2010, he was a tea party darling). There will always be more people to challenge the establishment, and more quisling Republicans who need to be taught a lesson.

So the tea party has a cycle it runs through: Get angry, find a Republican target of the anger, mount some sort of campaign against him and if you win, great, but if you don’t, just find the next traitor to go after. The 2014 primaries are almost over, and when they are, and we get past November, the tea party will turn its focus to the presidential campaign and the 2016 House and Senate primaries. The tea party isn’t going to miss Chris McDaniel. He did his job, but now it’s over.

Progressives should take note. This is how you create change in the American system. Find bad Democrats in safe blue areas. Primary them–hopefully, with good progressives that the grassroots movement has helped foster from local elections through to the statehouse. Winning is nice, but not ultimately necessary. Scaring politicians is often good enough.

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