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Month: August 2015

Tomorrow belongs to …Rand? #notbloodylikely

Tomorrow belongs to …Rand?

by digby

Rand Paul wrote an op-ed about how he is leading the “The Party of Tomorrow”. Seriously. I wrote about it at Salon today.

An excerpt:

Paul sets himself apart from the other guys by being a lone GOP critic of our criminal justice and surveillance policies, although the former is being taken up by the Koch brothers’ network as well. This appeals to young people, for obvious reasons. They are still idealistic enough to believe that the constitution means something. Of course, there are many Democrats who believe the same things, but it doesn’t seem quite as sexy as when it comes from a Republican.
And, needless to say, Paul made the usual libertarian argument against the war on drugs, another area in which he has far more in common with Democrats than his fellow Republicans. Indeed, if it weren’t for his stance on taxes, he could be one, right?
Well, no. Despite the fact that he refers to himself as “socially tolerant,” he has a few blind spots in that area that his target millennials are unlikely to find to attractive.
First of all, there’s the strange attitude toward race. He has recently worked to cover it up and has made an effort at reaching out to communities of color but the truth is that he’s something of a clod, at best, when it comes to that issue. Like the time he went to Howard University and talked to the students there as if they were in sixth grade history class, even going so far as to make a vacuous argument usually only seen at places like Fox and Friends or Bill O’Reilly’s twitter feed:
Paul devoted almost none of his speech Wednesday at the historically black college in Washington, D.C., to explaining the GOP’s thorny relationship with black voters over the last fifty years, and most of it arguing that “the Republican Party has always been the party of civil rights and voting rights.” His history lecture focused almost entirely on the period before 1964, when the GOP began to champion the states rights arguments of southern whites. Echoing a popular conservative talking point, Paul repeatedly reminded the audience that Democrats passed Jim Crow laws in the south and that Abraham Lincoln was a Republican, as were the first black legislators and the founders of the NAACP.
“Would everyone know here they were all Republicans?” he said at one point, referring to the NAACP’s founders.
“Yes!” came the booming response from nearly the entire audience, who appeared offended Paul would even raise the question.
The fact one of his closest advisors until recently was a neo-confederate who called himself the Southern Avenger also doesn’t speak well of his social tolerance when it comes to civil rights for racial minorities.
And then there’s gay rights. He told reporters back in 2013:
“I don’t think I’ve ever used the word gay rights, because I don’t really believe in rights based on your behavior.”
Since then he’s gone even further in his condemnation of gay marriage, saying, “It offends myself and many other people.” He went so far as to address a gathering of conservative preachers and declared it a “moral crisis”:
“Don’t always look to Washington to solve anything. In fact, the moral crisis we have in our country, there is a role for us trying to figure out things like marriage, there’s also a moral crisis that allows people to think that there would be some sort of other marriage.”
“We need a revival in the country. We need another Great Awakening with tent revivals of thousands of people saying, ‘reform or see what’s going to happen if we don’t reform.’”
Somehow I don’t think that’s the sort of thing that young people are on board with. More than 70 percent of them support gay marriage. There’s no data on their enthusiasm for tent revival meeting with thousands of people saying “reform or else” though, so maybe he’s on to something there.
And last, but hardly least, his stance on women’s rights is something out of the mesozoic era. He is a hardcore anti-abortion zealot of the kind you see screaming in the faces of women as they try to walk into a Planned Parenthood clinic. For a man who fetishizes liberty for every type of ownership known to mankind, he makes one very big exception when it comes to women owning their own bodies.

Rand has said a lot of things about abortion over the years, much of it incoherent and abstract. He says one day  that the states should decide and at other times waxed philosophical about when life begins. But you don’t need to know anything more than this to know just how extreme he really is on this issue: He has sponsored the “Life at Conception Act” (also known as “fetal personhood”) which defines a fertilized egg as a person and would implement equal protections under the 14th Amendment for the “right to life of each born and pre-born human person.” The implications of this for women’s autonomy and agency are overwhelming.

There’s lots more at the link. If there’s a bigger flim-flam artist in the GOP, I can’t think of one. And that’s really saying something.

Great balls of foreboding by @BloggersRUs

Great balls of foreboding
by Tom Sullivan

With Hillary Clinton getting Swift Servered in the media for being, you know, Hillary Clinton, and with Bernie Sanders being used as a progressive effigy by Black Lives Matter, Washington-level Democrats are feeling a bit uneasy about their 2016 prospects this week. Opposed as they are by a Republican cornucopia of clowns, that’s saying something.

BuzzFeed News reported yesterday that, according to “a senior Democrat,” Al Gore supporters are “getting the old gang together” to explore the prospect of Gore entering 2016 presidential race:

“They’re figuring out if there’s a path financially and politically,” the Democrat said. “It feels more real than it has in the past months.”

[snip]

A member of Gore’s inner circle asked to be quoted “pouring lukewarm water” — not, note, cold water — on the chatter.

“This is people talking to people, some of whom may or may not have talked to him,” the Gore adviser said.

It is not clear what the purpose is of floating this story to BuzzFeed, but it smacks of some foreboding about Clinton’s electability. A retired white woman I spoke with last week expressed dislike for Clinton, if that’s any indication. She had voted for Obama, and now is eager for Joe Biden to jump into the race. It’s not just about trust, but likeability.

Reuters had this unusual bit of snark regarding the Gore rumor:

Still, the environmental activist, Nobel Peace Laureate and founder of Current TV enjoys some favor among voters. A recent Reuters poll shows 3.3 percent of Democrats would vote for Gore in the 2016 election, the same percentage as those who would elect actor George Clooney, but far less than the 18.8 percent who would vote for Gore’s old boss, Bill Clinton, who is barred by law from running again.

Politico asked Democratic strategist and Clintonista James Carville about the Gore rumor. While not surprised if Gore is looking at running, Carville observed that it is a “very fluid cycle, and it’s still early in the process.” Not exactly a “Ready for Hillary” from the Cajun cue ball.

Given how things played out for the Hillary juggernaut in 2008, perhaps the Clinton camp has decided it might make for a more compelling narrative (and make her less of a punching bag for the press) if she were not so obviously the Democrats’ front runner. Otherwise, where’s the drama?

In other news, Los Angeles has dumped “96 million black plastic balls into the city’s 175-acre reservoir in an effort to fight the effects of California’s drought.” Costing $34.5 million, the “shade balls” are intended to help stop evaporation and to prevent algae growth.

That’s kind of foreboding in itself. Al G.’s focus might be needed elsewhere.

Powerful protest

Powerful protest

by digby

Via Mother Jones:

Janelle Monáe and her badass record label, Wondaland, led a Black Lives Matter march in Philadelphia yesterday, and today she released a powerful new mix of her bonus track, “Hell You Talmbout,” off her latest effort, The Electric Lady. On the new version, Monáe is accompanied by labelmates Deep Cotton, St. Beauty, Jidenna, Roman GianArthur, and George 2.0. The track features chants of “Say his/her name” along with the names of recent victims of police brutality over a heart-pounding drumbeat.

Listen. It will stay with you. Wow.

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The truth stings

The truth stings

by digby

Paul Waldman at The Plum Line caught this interesting little factoid from Sarah Kliff’s story about watching all 12 hours of the Planned Parenthood sting tapes:

The most interesting point to me is that while the Planned Parenthood representatives keep reiterating that they don’t profit from fetal tissue but only want to be reimbursed for their costs, there’s a “negotiation” in which the anti-choice activists are trying to convince Planned Parenthood to take more money, presumably so that they could then charge Planned Parenthood with profiting from the sale of fetal tissue.

That’s undoubtedly what they were trying to do. But it struck me that it’s also exactly what the FBI and DHS agents do every day when they find some sad sack and entrap him into making some half-baked terrorist plan so they can arrest them and pat themselves on the back for doing it.

That’s what “stings” are. And people should be properly skeptical about anything produced from such things. Creating a crime so that you can “solve” it (or “expose” it) is not the same as solving or exposing actual crimes.

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QOTD: a pro-life advocate

QOTD: a pro-life advocate

by digby

Jimmy Carter has liver cancer that has metastasized.   He is 90 and it’s a triumph to live this long and this fully. I hope he feels well and happy as he faces this next challenge.

But I dread the coming commentary like this.  I hope we can collect it all for the next time Republicans sanctimoniously lecture liberals about our alleged disrespectful behavior in these circumstances.  You know, like when we are criticized for celebrating someone’s life  on the occasion of their death.

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Kasich, the new “it guy” has been asleep since 1999

Kasich, the new “it guy” has been asleep since 1999

by digby

I wrote about John Kasich for Salon this morning. I know everyone thinks he’s a moderate and really “cool guy” and all but I’m afraid he’s living in the past:

The beltway is intrigued by Kasich for all the reasons they are always intrigued by Republicans from the rust belt:Working class white voters live there, and in their mind they are the avatars of Real America. These states around the Great Lakes tend to be swing states, and they like to elect bipartisan “reformers,” which is a thrilling concept to the beltway establishment, which fetishizes the idea that all that’s required of the president is a particular personality that commits to “getting the job done.”
Previously, Scott Walker had them tricked into thinking he was 2016’s bipartisan “it guy” — until they realized that he has the personality of a doorstop and the policies of Ted Cruz. Even these insiders can’t pretend that Walker will be the bipartisan champion they’ve been waiting for. So now Kasich is the guy.

The problem is that Kasich is seriously out of touch.

On his appearance on “Meet the Press” last weekend, Kasich sounded as if he woke up and thought he was still in his first presidential run back in 1999:
“Now, some people say, ‘Well, you favor a path to citizenship.’ No, I do not. But I have never taken any of this off the table because, Chuck, whether it’s fixing Social Security, balancing a budget, rebuilding the Pentagon, fixing the border, whatever, you cannot do these things with just one party. They tried it with Obamacare, and now even the Democrats run away from Obamacare. I have learned over the course of my lifetime you need some degree of bipartisan cooperation. And just think back to Ronald Reagan and Tip O’Neill. I mean, they were working together when it was to serve America. And that’s what I think we need, a good dose of that.”
That’s right, he actually used that moldy Tip and Ronnie line like he thought nobody had ever heard it before. (In fairness, he wasn’t alone — during the Kiddie Table debate last week, Lindsay Graham said, “I will be the Ronald Reagan if I can find a Tip O’Neill,” but his delivery throughout was so lugubrious you would have been forgiven for falling asleep before he reached the punchline.)

But Kasich didn’t reveal just how out of touch he is with that stale, overused trope alone. Look at his list of issues: Now it’s true that the border is a hot item in this race, but “fixing social security,” rebuilding the Pentagon, and balancing the budget are agenda items that have all fallen down the list of GOP concerns in the last few years. Sure, they are perennial talking points, but apparently he is unaware of the fact that the Obama White House offered up huge cuts to Social Security and his own party agreed to major cuts to the Pentagon in the last few years. Conservatives held their breath until they turned blue and ended up without the former while letting the Pentagon cuts go through. And yes, they also cut a bunch of social programs for the poor, of the kind Kasich actually defends.

Is Kasich laboring under the illusion that he can tame the GOP? Perhaps he should schedule a dinner with his old friends John Boehner and Eric Cantor to catch up on what’s been happening while he was toiling at Fox News.

But this comment from a town hall in New Hampshire on Tuesday perfectly illustrates how stuck in the past Kasich really is:
“On entitlements, they all need to be—so let me give you my basic feeling on it. If you’re on it, we don’t want to take it away. The baby boomers are going to have to give some on it. Not sure what it’s going to be yet, because I gotta go back and do all the numbers again. And for the younger people I still like the idea of giving them an opportunity to earn money through the strength of our American economy, with Social Security included in that.”
He also needs to consult a calendar, because many millions of baby boomers have already been “on it” for some time now, and those who aren’t are getting very close. Now it’s true that back in 1999, when Kasich last looked at the figures, we were all a lot younger. Apparently, he hasn’t thought through the implications of all that — but he’s going to go back and “do all the numbers again” so that’s good.

Yes, while Kasich was busy collecting his Lehman Brothers paycheck, George W. Bush was trying to privatize Social Security — oh, excuse me, “give young people the opportunity to earn money through the strength of our American economy, with Social Security included in that.” That’s yet another late-’90s idea which the epic market crash of 2007 finally put out to pasture when it was made obvious to everyone except Wall Street and John Kasich that having every last bit of your pension rely on the “strength of the American economy” might not be such a hot idea. Enough people at or close to retirement lost a lot of money and growth in their retirement plans as it was.

There’s more at the link …

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Dispatch from torture nation: Manning edition

Dispatch from torture nation: Manning edition

by digby

Jesus H. Christ:

Chelsea Manning, the US army soldier serving a 35-year military prison sentence for leaking official secrets, has been threatened with indefinite solitary confinement for having an expired tube of toothpaste in her cell and being found in possession of the Caitlyn Jenner Vanity Fair issue, according to her lawyers and supporters.

Manning, a Guardian columnist who writes about global affairs, intelligence issues and transgender rights from prison in the brig of Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, has allegedly been charged with four violations of custody rules that her lawyers have denounced as absurd and a form of harassment. The army private is reportedly accused of having showed “disrespect”; of having displayed “disorderly conduct” by sweeping food onto the floor during dinner chow; of having kept “prohibited property” – that is books and magazines – in her cell; and of having committing “medicine misuse”, referring to the tube of toothpaste, according to Manning’s supporters.

The maximum punishment for such offences is an indeterminate amount of time in a solitary confinement cell.

The fourth charge, “medicine misuse”, follows an inspection of Manning’s cell on 9 July during which a tube of anti-cavity toothpaste was found. The prison authorities noted that Manning was entitled to have the toothpaste in her cell, but is penalizing her because it was “past its expiration date of 9 April 2015”.

The “prohibited property” charge relates to a number of books and magazines that were found in her cell and confiscated. They included the memoir I Am Malala by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai, a novel featuring trans women called A Safe Girl to Love, the LGBT publication Out Magazine, the Caitlyn Jenner issue of Vanity Fair and a copy of Cosmopolitan that included an interview with Manning.

Also confiscated was the US Senate report on torture. It is not clear why any of these publications were considered violations of prison rules – a request by the Guardian to the army public affairs team for an explanation of the charges received no immediate response.

I’m going to guess it that report on torture that really set them off. After all, these prisons practice torture every day so they probably believe that a prisoner reading such material is automatically insubordinate.

Solitary confinement is torture.The Center for Constitutional Rights says:

The devastating psychological and physical effects of prolonged solitary confinement are well documented by social scientists: prolonged solitary confinement causes prisoners significant mental harm and places them at grave risk of even more devastating future psychological harm and at times, these harms were found to be permanent or persist even after one was released from solitary.

Researchers have demonstrated that prolonged solitary confinement causes a persistent and heightened state of anxiety and nervousness, headaches, insomnia, lethargy or chronic tiredness, nightmares, heart palpitations, fear of impending nervous breakdowns and higher rates of hypertension and early morbidity. Other documented effects include obsessive ruminations, confused thought processes, an oversensitivity to stimuli, irrational anger, social withdrawal, hallucinations, violent fantasies, emotional flatness, mood swings, chronic depression, feelings of overall deterioration, as well as suicidal ideation.

Exposure to such life-shattering conditions clearly constitutes cruel and unusual punishment – in violation of the Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Further, the brutal use of solitary has been condemned as torture by the international community.

Manning is a political prisoner being held as an example to others. And they are apparently contemplating torturing him. For reading about the United States torture program.

We should be outraged but I’m sure we won’t be. Everyone will be tittering about her reading the Caitlyn Jenner story.

Sometimes, ]the news is just too depressing for words.

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Fiorina’s moment

Fiorina’s moment

by digby

Today Amy Chozick in the New York Times profiled Carly Fiorina and examined her newfound salience in the race:

Early in her candidacy Mrs. Fiorina, whose corporate leadership style has been described as brash, proved eager to sharply criticize Mrs. Clinton, while other candidates hesitated. Her gender provided a shield from what many Republicans assumed would be repercussions against a man attacking Mrs. Clinton so early and often.

The attention earned Mrs. Fiorina a special kind of support: donations from Republicans who did not consider her their first choice, but who viewed her as an important voice on a male-dominated stage. These included a “super PAC” that has been supporting Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, which gave $500,000 to a “super PAC” backing Mrs. Fiorina.

At least for now, Mrs. Fiorina said she was fine being a second choice. “I have heard donors say, ‘You know, I’m supporting someone else but I want to be supportive of you, as well,’ ” she said.

Yes. I wrote about this earlier in the week for Salon, not that it’s a particularly earthshattering observation.They are supporting her because they believe that as a woman she can attack Clinton much more harshly than a man without incurring charges of sexism. (That’s wrong, because women can be sexist too — just ask Phyllis Schlafly.)

I was surprised that Chozick didn’t mention this in her article though:

Seems relevant, no?

Anyway, Fiorina’s having her moment. She’s completely unqualified to be president but then that’s how the GOP “woman outreach” for candidates seems to work. For her sake, I hope she’s a little bit more disciplined about what she says on open mics this time.

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We want the world and we want it now! by @BloggersRUs

We want the world and we want it now!
by Tom Sullivan

The 1960s are back. Campaign for America’s Future’s Bill Scher looks at the no-win scenario Bernie Sanders faces, not just from Black Lives Matter activists, but from the whole progressive spectrum:

In effect, Bernie isn’t running for President of the United States of America. He’s running to be President of Progressive America. And when you are running to be an ideological standard-bearer, your ideological fellow travellers all demand you adhere to their own standard. That involves not just checking every box on the liberal to-do list, but giving maximum rhetorical emphasis to everyone’s top priority. Which is impossible. It’s a game that can’t be won.

Sanders has already proposed immigration reform more liberal than the 2013 bipartisan Senate bill in a speech to the National Council of La Raza and incorporated a searing critique of entrenched racism into his regular stump. His reward was a public scolding by Seattle activists who prevented him from speaking at a Social Security rally, one of whom demanded the crowd “join us now in holding Bernie Sanders accountable for his actions.”

Perhaps what they (and other activists) really want to hold Sanders accountable for is whatever hope and change Obama
failed to deliver. This time, no prisoners.

Black Live Matter demonstrators interrupted a Jeb Bush town hall event in Nevada yesterday. So perhaps Sanders won’t feel so singled out. (I know, BLM is not about Bernie.)

Sanders adviser Lawrence Lessig does not believe Sanders is giving campaign finance reform high enough billing:

“Citizen equality can’t just be one issue on a list. It has to be the first issue — the one change that makes all other changes believable,” Lessig wrote in the memo, obtained by POLITICO. “For the first time in forever, the Wall Street Journal reports this issue is at the top of voters’ mind. You need to be the leader who makes it top of your platform as well.”

So Harvard professor Lessig, if you haven’t heard, is looking at running for president himself, just so he can pass a package of election reforms and then resign. Because Lessig’s “set of quibbles” with Sanders makes Bernie not liberal enough.

Some environmental activists probably worry Sanders is not putting climate change, their foremost issue, front and center. Sanders must feel like Peanuts‘ Linus: There’s no heavier burden than a great potential!

Scher continues at Politico:

Sanders defenders are apoplectic that the ultimate progressive is getting kicked in the teeth by fellow progressives. “Don’t Piss On Your Best Friend” upbraided Gawker’s Hamilton Nolan. But the critics don’t see Sanders’ as their best friend, because his strategic approach doesn’t line up with theirs.

Sanders is forced to grapple with the various strands of the progressive movement in ways he hadn’t before because he decided to enter the presidential arena. A senator can pick and choose his issues more easily than a presidential candidate. While a traditional candidate succeeds by knowing when to cater to a party’s political base and when to keep it at arm’s length, a movement candidate doesn’t have that luxury. All that complicates the progressive objective of influencing the party Establishment.

But with the “wave of deadly encounters” between unarmed black people and police, patience is running thin.

Van Jones writes, today’s activists will no longer wait for “trickle down justice.”

This may not be their Summer of Love, but you can hear the echoes.

Where have you gone, Jim Morrison?

Sweating in the clown car

Sweating in the clown car

by digby

Oh fergawdsakes:

Trump responded as only he can:

Rand Paul is doing so poorly in the polls he has to revert to old footage of me discussing positions I no longer hold. As a world-class businessman, who built one of the great companies with some of the most iconic real estate assets in the world, it was my obligation to my family, my company, my employees and myself to maintain a strong relationship with all politicians whether Republican or Democrat. I did that and I did that well.

Unless you are a piece of unyielding granite, over the years positions evolve as they have in my case. Ronald Reagan, as an example, was a Democrat with a liberal bent who became a conservative Republican.

Recently, Rand Paul called me and asked me to play golf. I easily beat him on the golf course and will even more easily beat him now, in the world in the politics.

Senator Paul does not mention that after trouncing him in golf I made a significant donation to the eye center with which he is affiliated.

I feel sorry for the great people of Kentucky who are being used as a back up to Senator Paul’s hopeless attempt to become President of the United States— weak on the military, Israel, the Vets and many other issues. Senator Paul has no chance of wining the nomination and the people of Kentucky should not allow him the privilege of remaining their Senator. Rand should save his lobbyist’s and special interest money and just go quietly home.

Rand’s campaign is a total mess, and as a matter of fact, I didn’t know he had anybody left in his campaign to make commercials who are not currently under indictment!

Instead of laughing, Rand Paul’s campaign actually responded. Angrily.

That crowded clown car’s getting hot!