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Month: August 2014

Thom’s way or no highway @BloggersRUs

Thom’s way or no highway


by Tom Sullivan

Besides his woman problem, North Carolina GOP Senate nominee Thom Tillis has a toll problem. And a base problem.

Interstate 77 in Tillis’ district badly needs widening. But Thom and his ALEC buddies insist on installing High Occupancy Toll (HOT) lanes over objections from his party, local Republican lawmakers, and a conservative think tank in Raleigh. His local tea party calls the I-77 project Thom’s Tholl Road.

The GOP is expert at exploiting wedge issues to divide and conquer opponents. But here the wedge is intraparty. There is a split among the GOP’s right-wing populists, its libertarian ideologues, and it’s ALEC-friendly, crony corporatists. It seems HOT lanes have become a flash point. Free-marketeer libertarians consider that when government (We the People) provides any product or service on a not-for-profit basis, it’s another big-government crime against capitalism; they favor anything that gets government out of the way of private profit. Grassroots fiscal conservatives see schemes such as HOT lanes — contracted to foreign conglomerates, funded with federal loans, and with private profit margins backstopped with state tax dollars — as yet another example of crony capitalism screwing taxpayers. It is. And it’s just what the Koch brothers’ privateers want more of.

So how big a wedge is this? Behold the Weekly Standard from April, critiquing at length a 75-year, single-bidder HOT lanes concession in Virginia:

The arrangement is every capitalist’s dream: free land, developed with taxpayer money, for privatized profits and socialized losses.

Of course, in the Weekly Standard’s fever dream it’s not rent-seeking corporatists ramrodding privatization of America’s highways, but progressive ideologues (and libertarians) bent on discouraging a middle-class lifestyle they find “distasteful.”

Thom Tillis himself did not address the HOT lane issue at an appearance before a group of business leaders in Asheville Friday morning (timestamp 1:00:00). But as party activists and business-minded constituents have before, several times on Friday questioners asked state candidates about highway funding and the possibility of seeing of “dynamic tolling” on I-77 and I-26. These aren’t progressives and libertarians. They are Thom Tillis’ base voters. And they are uneasy.

Hard to tell, but when even conservative are worried about the impact ALEC’s designs might have for their small businesses, tolls just might be a sleeper issue for Republicans that so far the press has missed.

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They all look alike

They all look alike

by digby

That’s right, all Americans look like Americans. Since Americans look like everyone.

This story from Gawker is about an interection between the conservative Governor of Georgia and a latina who asked him a question:

Deal addressed a variety of topics, including immigration, during a question and answer session sponsored by the UGA College Republicans Tuesday night.

“There’s a fundamental problem that can only be resolved at the Congressional level and that is to deal with the issue of children, and I presume you probably fit the category, children who were brought here,” said Deal who was looking toward Lizbeth Miranda, a Hispanic student who was standing up with others asking questions.

“I’m not an illegal immigrant. I’m not,” said Miranda. “I don’t know why you would have thought that I was undocumented. Was it because I look Hispanic?”

The governor replied: “I apologize if I insulted you. I did not intend to.”

Miranda and her colleagues in the school’s Undocumented Students Alliance found Deal’s assumption offensive, though judging from the boos she received, College Republicans in attendance were more offended by her reaction.

Those college Republicans undoubtedly assumed she was an “illegal” too. As they undoubtedly assume all Hispanics are “illegals” or, in any case, not Real Americans regardless of their citizenship.

This illustrates the problem for Republicans on this issue. To most Latinos, whether they hold American citizenship or not, demonizing the DREAM kids and all the other immigrants who are merely trying to eke out a living so they can feed their families (particularly when these haters claim that people from south of the border “destroy our way of life) is a sure sign that they too are seen in similar fashion.

But what are these Republicans going to do? They have a base full of people who are fearful xenophobes and are being egged on by the conservative industrial complex for profit. They’re stuck.

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“A Fierce Minimalist”

“A Fierce Minimalist”

by digby

I think Peter Beinert has this right. Obama isn’t a hawk or a dove and he does have a strategy and a worldview:

On the one hand, Obama has shown a deep reluctance to use military force to try to solve Middle Eastern problems that don’t directly threaten American lives. He’s proved more open to a diplomatic compromise over Iran’s nuclear program than many on Capitol Hill because he’s more reticent about going to war with Tehran. He’s been reluctant to arm Syria’s rebels or bomb Basher al-Assad because he doesn’t want to get sucked into that country’s civil war. After initially giving David Petraeus and company the yellow light to pursue an expanded counterinsurgency campaign in Afghanistan, he’s wound down America’s ground war against the Taliban. Even on Libya, he proved more reluctant to intervene than the leaders of Britain and France.

On the other hand, he’s proven ferocious about using military force to kill suspected terrorists. In Afghanistan and Pakistan, he’s basically adopted the policy Joe Biden proposed at the start of his administration: Don’t focus on fighting the Taliban on the ground, since they don’t really threaten the United States. Just bomb the hell out al-Qaeda from the air. Compared with George W. Bush, he’s dramatically expanded drone strikes, even though they’re unilateral, legally dubious, and morally disturbing. And, as promised, he sent special forces to kill Osama bin Laden without Pakistan’s permission, even though his vice president and secretary of defense feared the risks were too high.

When it comes to the Middle East, in other words, Obama is neither a dove nor a hawk. He’s a fierce minimalist. George W. Bush defined the War on Terror so broadly that in anti-terrorism’s name he spent vast quantities of blood and treasure fighting people who had no capacity or desire to attack the United States. Hillary Clinton and John McCain may not use the “War on Terror” framework anymore, but they’re still more willing to sell arms, dispatch troops, and drop bombs to achieve goals that aren’t directly connected to preventing another 9/11. By contrast, Obama’s strategy—whether you like it or not—is more clearly defined. Hundreds of thousands can die in Syria; the Taliban can menace and destabilize Afghanistan; Iran can move closer to getting a bomb. No matter. With rare exceptions, Obama only unsheathes his sword against people he thinks might kill American civilians.

I’m a dove so I disagree with his drone war. It’s hard to see that it’s done much good and, as with most wars, it’s done a lot of harm. But I’m with him on the minimalism when it comes to unleashing the military and firmly believe that our alleged humanitarianism is only rarely truly motivated by humanitarianism and almost always makes things worse. I think it’s very smart for a global military empire to take a minimalist approach to war. Seriously, it should be the default position.

There are threats in the world to be sure. There’s a true sense of global instability right now. But the world’s most powerful military injecting its ultra-violence into the situation is hardly guaranteed to make a positive difference. And the costs are huge. Beinert lays out all the critiques, particularly by liberals who believe that a minimalist approach allows these situations to fester when earlier engagement might prevent them from hurtling out of control. But also explains why Obama might disagree with that. And again, I agree with Obama (if this is what he thinks.)

Obama would probably respond that when it comes to stopping jihadist terrorism from taking root by ensuring representative government, territorial integrity, and national unity in countries like Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan, an ounce of prevention isn’t nearly enough. The effort costs billions of dollars and a whole lot of American troops. Even then, it might fail because given America’s track record, analogies that portray Washington as a doctor with a sophisticated and empathetic understanding of its Middle Eastern patients are way too benign. Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan could certainly have used preventative care in the Obama years. But America’s prophylactic efforts might have involved leeches, not aspirin. As Richard Holbrooke learned the hard way during his time as special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, America’s national-security bureaucracy isn’t geared toward diplomacy and economic development. It’s mostly designed to blow things up.

It would be a very good idea to change that. But that’s a very tall order. The American national security establishment (aka our Imperial Bureaucracy) has been in place for over half a century, growing stronger and stronger by the decade to the point at which it is now unassailable. I’m all for changing that. Ideas on how to proceed are welcome.

Beinert’s article goes on to explain how politics enters into this and thinks Obama is reflecting the country’s mood with this approach. He points out that, so far, the GOP presidential hopefuls haven’t gone all Cheney on us, which means that Obama still has his finger on the pulse. Maybe. I have a sneaking suspicion that we might be emerging from that post-Iraq, recessionary malaise and could be looking for some action. I hope not. But when I see the Democratic Party accusing their rivals of being isolationists in the “Blame America First” crowd I get worried. War can be a marvelous distraction from other problems.

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Memo from the Department of Duh

Memo from the Department of Duh

by digby

Surely this didn’t just occur to them:

A House Republican-led investigation of the 2012 terrorist attack on an American diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, will extend well into next year, and possibly beyond, raising concerns among Democrats that Republicans are trying to damage Hillary Rodham Clinton’s presidential prospects.

Some of us have known this for years. Literally:

…they didn’t drag out Toensing and DeGenova by accident. And that’s because this is only marginally about Obama’s second term.

I’ve got one word that explains it: Hillary.

These people are Clinton character assassination specialists. And the right sees Benghazi as a Clinton scandal. Just watch Fox news for any half hour slot in a 24 hour period and it will come up. It’s already become a punchline — and a mantra.

Trumped up Clinton scandals are of a particular variety that are likely to make a comeback when Hillary Clinton runs again. I’ve written a lot about that too over the years. I call them “smell-test” scandals which are these long, drawn-out investigations in which details are dribbled out over time to give the impression of wrong-doing simply by the length and number of inquiries. When you add up the details they inevitably amount to nothing but that’s not the point. The point is to create an atmosphere of scandal, a “feeling” that all this smoke must add up to something. (And there’s always the hope that Monica Lewinsky  — or something like her — will turn up to explode the whole thing into a real scandal.)

They’ve tried this with Obama and the IRS scandal and Solyndra and a few others and it doesn’t seem to work with him. (They’re settling now on the “tyrannical despot” approach.) But with the Clinton and her long history in politics, it’s inevitable that they would dust off this scandal manual. It will be interesting to see if she handles it any differently than former president Clinton did. He fended them off one by one, but there was always a feeling that he was somehow energized by that challenge. I’m not sure that’s true of Hillary.

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QOTD: DHS Secretary Jeh Johnson

QOTD: DHS Secretary Jeh Johnson

by digby

FYI:

At present, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the FBI are unaware if any specific credible threat to the U.S homeland from ISIL.  Plainly, however, violent extremists who support ISIL have demonstrated the intent and capability to target American citizens overseas. And ISIL constitutes an active and serious threat within the region.

Somebody go throw a bucket of ice water on Huckleberry Graham’s head —- to stop him from running around in circles screaming “they’re coming to kill us, ohmygod we’re all going to die!!!” It would appear that ISIL and its friends are busy right now wreaking havoc on the people in its neighborhood and aren’t planning to invade South Carolina to commit atrocities on God fearing Christians over the labor day week-end.

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RIP public higher ed

RIP public higher ed

by digby

This quote from Janet Napolitano, now head of the University of California system, is via Ed Kilgore:

[I]t is troubling to consider that at some point in the last six years, 41 state legislatures in the United States slashed funding for their public universities and colleges.

Sadly, funding remains constrained for public higher education, despite an economy that slowly grows more robust. Only 14 states have re-invested in higher education at levels equal to or above their pre-recession levels. Last year, 20 states actually cut more funding from their public universities and colleges.

Kilgore comments:

… the deep cuts in higher ed funding by state legislatures that occurred nearly everywhere during the Great Recession haven’t been fully restored much of anywhere, despite radically improved state fiscal climates.

The skyrocketing public college and university tuitions we’ve all become accustomed to seeing are the direct result of this reduced state support. And it’s worth remembering that no matter how much progress we make in controlling college costs (and student debt levels) through various reforms won’t much matter if state legislatures perpetually pocket the savings and disinvest in higher ed.

Libertarian paradise here we come. Higher education will only be for those who can afford to pay huge sums or are willing to indenture themselves for decades. (And I’m sure the for-profit fly-by-nights will continue to sucker low income students into going into crippling debt.)

It sounds like perfect preparation for the new servant economy.

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Concerned” that Obama does nuance

Concerned” that Obama does nuance

by digby

Congressman Mike Rogers is “concerned”:

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers did not mince words Thursday, slamming President Barack Obama for an “odd” news conference during which the president said, “We do not have a strategy” to deter the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

“It was an odd press conference at the very best, but to have a press conference to say we don’t have a strategy was really shocking given the severity of the threat. That’s what’s so concerning to me,” Rogers (R-Mich.) told Wolf Blitzer on CNN.

Right. What you want is a president pounding on the podium insisting “I’m the decider! I’ll decide because I’ve decided!” Or something like that.

It is a good thing for a president to be thoughtful and to show the world that he’s being thoughtful. The US is a massive, military superpower and that can be threatening. Much better to have leadership that doesn’t sound as if it’s eager to drop bombs or invade at a moments notice and that it’s taking all sides into account.

President Obama is a lot of things but he isn’t stupid. I find it hard to believe that he didn’t say they were working out a strategy as part of a diplomatic move as they’re working with allies in the region. I know it’s hard for hawks to understand this because they spend their entire lives trying to prove their manhood, but sometimes it’s better not to rush in and take charge of every situation. Sometimes it makes more sense to give others the chance to step up. It tends to give them a different stake in the outcome and possibly allows them to not feel as if they are a vassal of the United States. (Which is undoubtedly why Mike Rogers doesn’t like it.)

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Pennsylvania takes up Medicare expansion, drives another nail in the anti-ACA coffin, by @DavidOAtkins

Pennsylvania takes up Medicare expansion, drives another nail in the anti-ACA coffin

by David Atkins

It looks like 500,000 more Americans are about to get healthcare thanks to the ACA. Greg Sargent has the details:

In another sign that the politics of Obamacare continue to shift, the Medicaid expansion is now all but certain to come to another big state whose Republican governor had previously resisted it: Pennsylvania.

The federal government has approved Pennsylvania Governor Tom Corbett’s application for the state’s own version of the Medicaid expansion, without a handful of the conditions Corbett had hoped to impose, Dem sources tell me.

Corbett just announced that he will accept the expansion that has been offered, perhaps with some last-minute changes — expanding coverage and subsidies to as many as half a million people.

This comes after months of jockeying between Corbett and the federal government. Corbett had pushed for a version of the expansion that would have imposed various conditions designed to make it more palatable to conservatives and to achieve political distance from Obamacare — while simultaneously taking all that federal money. Among them: Using the cash to pay for private coverage for the poor.

This is a big deal not only for the future of the ACA but also for Pennsylvania politics. The GOP has been wanting to make gains in the Keystone State for a long time now. Another half a million voters who get healthcare through the ACA puts another big crimp in that plan.

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From the *schmaht as a whip* file: GOP adopts the “women are stupid sluts” strategy.

From the schmaht as a whip file: GOP adopts the “women are stupid sluts” strategy.

by digby

North Carolina GOP Senate nominee Thom Tillis is, like all Republicans, having some problems attracting women voters. So he’s decided to talk to them as if they are 6 years old and patronize that silly lady Senator he’s running against as a feather-head who can’t add numbers. I’m sure it’s going to be very effective for him:

Personally, I think he missed a great opportunity to call her a slut and tell her to close her legs. That strategy works like a charm.

BTW: it’s his math that’s questionable