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Month: January 2016

QOTD: Jebbers

QOTD: Jebbers

by digby

From the “nothing to see here people, move along” files:

“Putting aside a police officer shooting a black man, most of the crimes are black on black in the communities. Most by far. The police shooting of unarmed black males, which is what the conversation is about as I understand it, is very small.”

I just love that term “black on black” crime. (Reminds of Santorum’s old trope “man on dog.”) It’s animalistic and crude and coveys some sort of specific pathology. After all, you never hear the term “white on white” crime in “the communities” when the very same dynamic is in play. Criminals do their work in their communities. Yes. What that has to do with agents of the state routinely killing unarmed black people escapes me. But it’s a very popular non-sequitur among the wingnut crowd.

It’s vaguely depressing to see Jeb running as a right winger even as he knows that there’s little chance he’s going to pull this out. You’d think he’d have a little dignity and just try to preserve what’s left of the family name — and the Republican party.

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They’ve got a crush on The Donald

They’ve got a crush on The Donald

by digby

This isn’t as good as the 2012 Rick Santorum anthem “Game On”, but it’s pretty awesome:

The lyrics:

Cowar-dice
Are you serious?!
Apol-o-gies for freedom
I can’t handle this!

When freedom rings
Answer the call!
Stand up tall!

Freedom’s on our shoulders
USA!!!

En-u-mies
Of free-dum
Face the music!
Come on boys!
Take ’em down!

President Donald Trump knows how
To make Ameri-ca great
Deal from strength or get crushed everytime!

Over her
USA!
Over there
USA!
Freedomand liberty everywhere

Oh say can you see
It’s not so ea-sy
But we have to stand up tall
An answer freedom’s call

USA, USA!
USA, USA!
Land of the free and the home of the brave
USA!
The stars and stripes are flying
Let’s celebrate our freedom
Inspire proudly freedom to the world

Ameritude
American pride
It’s attitude, it’s who we are
Stand up tall

We’re the red, white and blue
Fiercely free!
That’s who!
Our colors don’t run, no siree

Over here
USA!
Over there
USA!
Freedom and liberty, everywhere

Oh say can you see
It’s not so easy
But we have to stand up tall and answer freedom’s call

Inspiring words. I feel like crying.

Really. Because I think it perfectly captures the appeal of Donald Trump.

Update: They seem to have gotten the idea from Trump’s good friend Kim Jong Un:

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He’s bigger than St Reagan now? Already?

He’s bigger than St Reagan now?

by digby

You have to love this headline:

Donald Trump Says His Political Movement Is Bigger Than Reagan’s

Pretty sure they should have put quotes around “political movement” since it’s really a euphemism.

“I think that the closest thing I can think of is Reagan, but I don’t think it’s the intensity that we have. Now, Reagan had a little bit of this, but I don’t think to the same extent—but he also won.”

Does he think he’s already won something?

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Whose religious freedom is it anyway?

Whose religious freedom is it anyway?

by digby

I wrote about the right’s latest crusade for “religious freedom” today for Salon

Since 1992, each January 16 the president issues a proclamation commemorating the passage of the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom in 1786. President Obama will presumably do it again this coming Saturday. This would not normally be of much notice to the general public, but these days the concept of “Religious Liberty” is a very hot topic on the right. It’s even a major item on the GOP presidential primary agenda.
Unsurprisingly, Mike Huckabee has gone further than anyone in the race promising to direct his Attorney General to “prosecute as hate crimes groups or individuals who discriminated or attacked individuals, businesses, religious organizations and others for their religious beliefs about marriage.”
Christian Right poster boy Ted Cruz issued this passionate cri de coeur just last week:
“What we are really seeing is an increasing hostility to religious liberty, and to Christians in particular. We’re just steps away from the chisels at Arlington coming out to remove crosses and Stars of David from tombstones.”
Jeb Bush gave the commencement speech at Liberty University and carried on for what seemed like hours on the subject. His message basically came down to this:
“From the standpoint of religious freedom, you might say it’s a choice between the Little Sisters and Big Brother – and I’m going with the Sisters.”
And Marco Rubio, obviously unschooled in the proper obfuscatory rhetoric, eschews the flowery prose and just blurts out what they really believe. He says on his website:
“Religious liberty is not simply the right to believe anything you want.”
Actually, that’s exactly what it is.
 As Frederick Clarkson explained in this piece, Thomas Jefferson considered his involvement in the drafting of that Virginia statute as important as his authorship of the Declaration of Independence. It was equally revolutionary: It removed the Anglican church as the official church of the state of Virginia and asserted that people were free to believe in any church, or no church, and it “shall in no wise diminish, enlarge, or affect their civil capacities.” It is considered the basis for the U.S. Constitution’s establishment clause, which was ratified four years after this was passed.
The Establishment Clause was a radical embrace of the Enlightenment; it was controversial then and it’s controversial now. Jefferson set out to explain his thinking on the matter. He wrote very explicitly that his intention was that the law held “within the mantle of its protection, the Jew and the Gentile, the Christian and Mohametan, the Hindoo and Infidel of every denomination.” And it will come as a surprise to the Christian Right who have been bamboozled by charlatans into believing otherwise, but Jefferson made it clear that the majority voted against adding any references to Christianity.
Not that this has stopped right wing hucksters like pseudo-historian David Barton, who is the CEO of one of Ted Cruz’s Super-PACs, and the looney Glenn Beck from rewriting this history out of whole cloth. It is one of the great cons in American life. Not only wasn’t the U.S. founded as a Christian nation; the founders discussed the subject at great length over many years and made it clear that it was not. What they did say was that individuals would be free to believe, or not believe, anything they want. That secular Enlightenment value is what Religious Freedom Day celebrates.
But as is their wont, the right wing has cleverly decided to use a postmodern approach to reinterpret this constitutional right as a license to impose their own beliefs on others. Just as the Second Amendment is now used to inhibit the exercise of the First Amendment, radical right-wing legal strategists have devised a plan to use the First Amendment to impose their religious beliefs on their fellow Americans. They cleverly call it a crusade for “religious liberty” when it is, in fact, an attempt to deny individuals the right to live their lives free from religious coercion.
Frederick Clarkson is the author of a new comprehensive report on this movement, called “When Exemption is the Rule: The Religious Freedom Strategy of the Christian Right.” Even those who follow this issue must be surprised at the scope of their efforts. In a nutshell, Clarkson reports that the right has created a number of new institutions and initiatives to advance the redefinition of the meaning of religious freedom. There are tens of millions of dollars from various right wing organizations flowing into these institutions to influence legal, political and cultural change. For instance:
The Becket Fund, which has litigated landmark Supreme Court cases like Hobby Lobby and Hosanna-Tabor, grew 86 percent in just four years, from FY2009 to FY2012. The national legal network Alliance Defending Freedom increased its annual revenues by $5 million during the same period (a 21% increase) while also expanding its effort to seek influential legal precedents in international courts.
In an important mainstreaming move, the conservative John Templeton Foundation funneled $1.6 million through the Becket Fund to establish a religious liberty clinic at Stanford University Law School. It opened in January 2013.
The Supreme Court’s 2014 Hobby Lobby ruling was the first high-level, national recognition of this new definition of religious freedom, which is essentially the recognition of an employer’s right to discriminate. (It allowed companies to claim a religious exemption from the Obamacare mandate that requires employers to offer contraception coverage in health insurance plans.) Essentially the court held that the religious beliefs of an employer supersedes the religious beliefs and personal conscience of individuals who work for them.

There’s much more. Just as right wing billionaires have funded the conservative movement to benefit business, ban abortion, deny climate change — all the usual wingnut obsessions — they are now funding a phony crusade to use religion to allow employers and others the right to flout government regulations in the name of religion.

There’s good news and good news on global warming by @BloggersRUs

There’s good news and good news on global warming
by Tom Sullivan


Earth at the last glacial maximum of the current ice age. Photo by Ittiz (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0], via Wikimedia Commons

The upside of global warming is that we may have pushed back the next ice age. Bloomberg Business reports:

The conditions necessary for the onset of a new ice age were narrowly missed at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution in the 1800s, researchers at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research near Berlin wrote Wednesday in the journal Nature. Since then, rising emissions of heat-trapping CO2 from burning oil, coal and gas have made the spread of the world’s ice sheets even less likely, they said.

The period between ice ages is about 50,000 years. But thanks to Standard Oil and the fossil fuels industry, one supposes, that threshold may have been pushed back another 50,000.

“This study further confirms what we’ve suspected for some time, that the carbon dioxide humans have added to the atmosphere will alter the climate of the planet for tens to hundreds of thousands of years, and has canceled the next ice age,” said Andrew Watson, a professor of Earth sciences at the University of Exeter in southwest England who wasn’t involved in the research. “Humans now effectively control the climate of the planet.”

Until the next errant asteroid comes knocking. Now that we control the climate, the natural progression is for arms manufacturers to turn climate into a weapon.

Still, we might need this planet a little longer. So having averted a new ice age, backing off on the CO2 emissions might seem prudent even if Donald Trump thinks that sounds politically correct. Thankfully, renewable energy seems to be thriving even in a low-carbon-price atmosphere:

Renewables just finished another record-breaking year, with more money invested ($329 billion) and more capacity added (121 gigawatts) than ever before, according to new data released Thursday by Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

This wasn’t supposed to happen. Oil, coal and natural gas bottomed out over the last 18 months, with bargain prices not seen in a decade. That’s just one of a handful of reasons 2015 should have been a rough year for clean energy. But the opposite was true.

Bloomberg Business reports that the world “is now adding more power capacity from renewables every year than from coal, natural gas, and oil combined.” Good thing, too, since just coincidentally we have a January tropical storm in the Atlantic for only the fourth time since 1851.

It sounds as if arms manufacturers will have to look elsewhere for planet-killing weapons. Of course, asteroids would make nifty planet-killers too. We’re just short on inhabited planets at which to aim them. Trump and Cruz would be all over closing the asteroid gap if only we could find Muslims in outer space….

Trumpie’s stream of consciousness SOTU

Trumpie’s stream of consciousness SOTU

by digby

Here’s the GOP frontrunner on the State of our Union:

As the president was getting ready to speak last night he was on the stump explaining his views on world affairs:

We have a little situation that could be a trojan horse. You look at what is happening in Germany. Cologne never had a problem. Cologne, Germany. Okay? Everything’s fine. Everything’s nice. Clean. Beautiful. No problem. Now they are having riots, they’re having rapes.

Have you heard about the New Year’s Eve [attack]? It was like a disaster. And the German people are going to riot. The German people are going to end up overthrowing Angela Merkel. I don’t know what the hell she is thinking. But they have millions of people pouring into Germany, now they’re not stopping them. Now I guess they are going to have to stop them because the German people aren’t going to put up [with it].

And our leaders want to have — I don’t believe you want to have — people coming in from migration from Syria. And when you look at that migration, it’s very unusual. I look at it and I see so many men and they are young. They look like they should be on the wrestling team. And they are young and they’re strong and you don’t see that many women, that many children. It’s sort of a weird deal. It’s the migration. You see all these young, strong people and they are mostly men and I say what’s going on.

I’ve noticed that, in all fairness to you news guys, I noticed that three or four months ago when it all started. And I said, ‘what’s going on?’ And who knows what it is. You know, the famous trojan horse. Is this a trojan horse? I doubt it, but it could very well be…

And they don’t have paperwork. They have no documentation whatsoever. They have no documentation. We’re bringing them into this country? We don’t know who they are. And you look at what happens in California. And you look at some of the things that happened including, you know, flying airplanes into the World Trade Center. Why are we doing this?

Build a safe zone in Syria. Get the Gulf states, who have a tremendous amount of money — Saudi Arabia was making $1 billion a day before oil went down. So now they are making half. Okay? They’re making a lot. Get them to pay. The other ones aren’t paying. We’re paying. We always pay. We’re the sucker. We’re the sucker. We’re like the stupid sucker. And we’re not going to pay anymore for all this stuff.

Yes, you read that right. He said the German people are going to “overthrow” Angela Merkel. He brings her up often at his rallies. He’s still miffed she was chosen as Time’s Person of the Year when he so clearly deserved it. They treated him very unfairly.

And anyway, she’s very “weak” you know. Just like everyone except Trump, Putin and Kim Jong Un.

Yeah, I’m sure the world would feel very confident about the most powerful nation on earth being led by this fellow. It’ll work out great.

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Who are they trying to kid? #Latinosarentstupid

Who are they trying to kid?

by digby

This is kind of hilarious. The GOP offered two rebuttals to the State of the Union address last night, one in English by Nikki Haley and one in Spanish by Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart. Except for the stories of their personal histories, the two speeches were almost exactly the same. Almost:

Haley advocated for fixing “our broken immigration system” and appeared to shut the door on refugees “whose intentions cannot be determined.”

No one who is willing to work hard, abide by our laws, and love our traditions should ever feel unwelcome in this country.

At the same time, that does not mean we just flat out open our borders. We can’t do that. We cannot continue to allow immigrants to come here illegally. And in this age of terrorism, we must not let in refugees whose intentions cannot be determined.

We must fix our broken immigration system. That means stopping illegal immigration. And it means welcoming properly vetted legal immigrants, regardless of their race or religion. Just like we have for centuries.

I have no doubt that if we act with proper focus, we can protect our borders, our sovereignty and our citizens, all while remaining true to America’s noblest legacies.

Diaz-Balart’s speech, meanwhile, took a softer approach and called for a humane solution for undocumented immigrants, according to a translation by The Miami Herald.

No one who is willing to work hard, abide by our laws, and love the United States should ever feel unwelcome in this country. It’s not who we are.

At the same time, it’s obvious that our immigration system needs to be reformed. The current system puts our national security at risk and is an obstacle for our economy.

It’s essential that we find a legislative solution to protect our nation, defend our borders, offer a permanent and humane solution to those who live in the shadows, respect the rule of law, modernize the visa system and push the economy forward. 



I have no doubt that if we work together, we can achieve this and continue to be faithful to the noblest legacies of the United States.

That certainly does give away the game.

Sadly for them,their usual gimmicks won’t work. Latinos aren’t all gullible morons.

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Speaking their language

Speaking their language

by digby

The success of the conservative movement’s message discipline is never better illustrated than when liberals use their cynical rhetoric without even realizing they’re doing it:

Pelosi said that she doesn’t believe in “abortion on demand” or that “abortion is a form of birth control” — two phases that abortion foes typically use to characterize abortion-rights supporters. NARAL objected to Pelosi merely repeating those phrases, even if she said she doesn’t agree with them.

“The Leader should stop using twisted GOP talking points about abortion and birth control,” NARAL senior vice president for campaigns and strategy Sasha Bruce said. “We don’t know women who demand abortion or use abortion as birth control. We do know women who make thoughtful decisions about how and if they want to start a family, and who need access to all reproductive-health care services, including abortion. We’re confident the Leader does too, which makes her comments all the more troubling.”

It’s pathetic how often liberals run into these traps. Clinton used the words “tax relief” the other day. Obama used all that “American might” talk last night that comes right out of the wingnut playbook. In the past, Sanders has used immigration rhetoric that could have come out of the mouth of Ted Cruz. It happens all the time.  None of them mean it in the same way the right wing means it, obviously. But using their language reinforces the right’s interpretation nonetheless.

The idea of “framing” issues has been discredited in recent years as some sort of proggy nonsense but the conservatives didn’t get that memo. They don’t come up with this stuff out of the blue. It’s very strategic. (You don’t think that every Republican politician started using the term “baby parts” by accident do you?)

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Have we always been addicted to fear?

Addicted to fear

by digby

This is why America should not be the world’s only super-power. We are simply, as a nation, too stupid to have that responsibility:

The least popular line in President Obama’s State of the Union address, judging by the hear-a-pin-drop reaction from members of Congress and others in the audience, came when he declared that ISIS may “pose a direct threat to our people” but its members “do not threaten our national existence.”

When Obama paused for applause, fewer than a dozen of the hundreds in attendance obliged him — the only such moment of the evening.

It was a revealing moment. Among Middle East and national security experts, it is considered a self-evident and banal truth to say that ISIS’s threat falls far short of existential. Yet on the main stage of American politics, acknowledging this well-known fact is considered not just impolitic but practically unspeakable.

Of course it’s a self-evident and banal truth. Not only that, but the only possible existential threat to America from another nation remains the same one that’s been out there for over half a century: a nuclear strike. And the same deterrent we’ve had during all that time remains in place — Mutually Assured Destruction. That’s a real threat, no doubt. But we’ve held it back so far.

Anything else, particularly the “threat” of some mentally deranged losers buying some guns and shooting Americans as an existential threat is so daft it’s embarrassing.  9/11 wasn’t even an existential threat and neither is this, especially since mentally deranged losers shoot Americans every single day and it’s treated like it’s completely normal.

When did Americans decide to love the image of ourselves being threatened so much? Have we always been this way?

Asking that question reminded me of this passage in Ryan Grim’s article about the president’s SOTU. He quotes expert scholar Robert Paxton:

“Fascism may be defined as a form of political behavior marked by obsessive preoccupation with community decline, humiliation, or victimhood and by compensatory cults of unity, energy, and purity, in which a mass-based party of committed nationalist militants, working in uneasy but effective collaboration with traditional elites, abandons democratic liberties and pursues with redemptive violence and without ethical or legal constraints goals of internal cleansing and external expansion.”

Well …

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