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Month: March 2016

Whatever floats your boat by @BloggersRUs

Whatever floats your boat
by Tom Sullivan

At a time when Americans are waiting for (and expecting) fistfights to break out at political rallies, thank God for the Brits. At least they’ve retained their sense of humor.

The UK’s Natural Environment Research Council has a new polar research vessel designed and ready for construction at a shipyard on the River Mersey. The new ship “will deliver world-leading capability for UK research in both Antarctica and the Arctic.”

But it needs a name. Something noble and historic. Perhaps the name of a legendary British explorer like Shackleton or something lofty and poetic like Endeavour?

The NERC announced the online voting contest to name the nearly $300 million boat to be launched in 2019 recently, and the leading vote-getter so far is the simple but silly “Boaty McBoatface.”

It’s never a good thing to take yourself too seriously. Especially on Monday.

A long time coming

A long time coming



by digby

Too long.

That high pitched sound you hear is a collective primal scream from America’s right wing …

Here’s is the last time an American president visited Cuba — a country that is only 90 miles off our shore:

Turnout myths

Turnout myths

by digby

This should be obvious but considering all the Villagers wringing their hands about the alleged “enthusiasm gap” among Democrats, but

I guess it has to be spelled out:

But Democrats shouldn’t worry. Republicans shouldn’t celebrate. As others have pointed out, voter turnout is an indication of the competitiveness of a primary contest, not of what will happen in the general election. The GOP presidential primary is more competitive than the Democratic race.

Indeed, history suggests that there is no relationship between primary turnout and the general election outcome. You can see this on the most basic level by looking at raw turnout in years in which both parties had competitive primaries. There have been six of those years in the modern era: 1976, 1980, 1988, 1992, 2000 and 2008.

The Democrats are having a spirited primary and it’s not done yet.  And the party’s agenda is being seriously challenged. But the Republicans are having a hysterical meltdown that could result in the party’s destruction.  Of course their turn-out is higher. 
Regardless of which candidate wins the Democratic Party it’s certain that turnout will be up in November because the GOP is likely going to nominate one of two extremists — likely the megalomaniacal Bond villain over the far right Dominionist Bircher. The bigger question is whether or not the Republicans will match it. They might. Their base is very worked up. But whatever moderates they have left are between a rock and hard place. They hate the Democrats as much as ever but a vote for Trump or Cruz is a bridge too far. I just don’t know how many of them there are so Dems should not be complacent. They need to make sure they get every last voter out even if the GOP seems depressed once all the dust has settled. You cannot take a chance that Donald Trump or Ted Cruz will become the most powerful single person on earth. 
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Today in Trumpland

Today in Trumpland

by digby

Just to catch you up if you have a life and haven’t been following Trump central:

“These are professional agitators, and I think that somebody should say that when a road is blocked going into the event so that people have to wait sometimes hours to get in, I think that’s very fair and there should be blame there, too,” he said on ABC’s “This Week.”

He added that protesters put up signs during his rallies that have “tremendous profanity.”
“I mean the worst profanity, and you have television cameras all over the place and people see these signs,” he said.

“I think maybe those people have some blame and should suffer some blame also.”

At a rally in Arizona on Saturday, protesters parked their cars near the location to block traffic. Traffic was backed up for miles, CNN reported.

Trump called it “unfair” that “professional” and “sick” protesters could put their cars in the road and block thousands of people from coming to his speech. He said the rally was delayed for an hour because of the protesters.

“And nobody says anything about that,” he said.

He also defended his rallies, saying he has huge numbers of people come out with few incidents. He added he does not condone violence.

“And we have very little violence — very, very little violence at the rallies,” he said.

Then there’s this with Trump’s thuggish campaign manager who last week was accused of roughing up a Breitbart reporter in Florida:

In a second incident, Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski appears to get into an altercation with another protestor. I want to be clear what we know in this caee and do not know. The video below was posted by CBS News reporter Jacqueline Alemany. She identifies the man with close cropped hair, to the protestors left, as Lewandowski. That appears correct to me but I can’t independently confirm that. The man identified as Lewandowski appears to grab the protestors collar and yank him back.

Why int the hell is the campaign manager even interacting with protesters at all? Shouldn’t this be left to the authorities?

As for the protesters blocking cars on the way to the Trump rally — cry me a river.

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Politics and Reality Radio by Joshua Holland w/ David K. Johnston, Julia Sweig, Martin Longman

Politics and Reality Radio: Trump’s taxes, Cuba Libre and The Supremes

by Joshua Holland

Hello, Hullabaloo readers (Hullabalooers?), and a huge thanks to Digby for letting me park my show, Politics and Reality Radio, in her driveway. By way of introduction, I’m Joshua Holland, and I’m a contributor to The Nation. I also contribute occasionally to Salon and Raw Story, and I used write for AlterNet and Moyers and Company.

The show is pretty simple: Each week, we talk to progressive journalists, newsmakers and academics, and we take some time digging into the topics at hand rather than trying to boil down complex issues into a series of short sound-bytes. We also try to have some fun with it, because American politics can be depressing as Hell otherwise. (Digby’s one of our favorite regular guests.) And it’s 100% commercial free, so if I’ve got something totally wrong, it’s not because of pressure from advertisers.

Link to this week’s podcast

This week, we look at what might be lurking in the tax returns that Republican front-runner and slick con artist Donald Trump refuses to make public. If anyone’s in a position to offer an informed theory, it’s David Cay Johnston, who won a Pulitzer Prize working the tax beat for The New York Times. He’s first up.

Then, as Obama embarks on a historic visit to Cuba, we’re joined by UT Austin research fellow Julia Sweig, who just returned from Cuba to offer a perspective on what’s going on down there now – and what the future may hold – that you won’t often hear on the evening news.

Finally, we speak to Martin Longman, web editor for The Washington Monthly (you may be more familiar with him as the blogger known as Booman) about Obama’s nomination of Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court. Some progressives aren’t pleased with the pick, but Booman likes it.

And here are this week’s musical breaks:

Vintage Jazz Cardigans with Haley Reinhart: “Lovefool”
AronChupa: “I’m an Albatraos”
Love: “Always See Your Face”
Gregory Isaacs: “Slave Master”

You can also subscribe to the show on Podbean or iTunes (but right now there’s some sort of snag with iTunes that we’re working to straighten out).

Hope you enjoy it:

The riot planners

The riot planners

by digby

You may recall that Florida Governor Rick Scott was one of the sponsors of the Tea Party townhalls back in 2009:

Greg Sargent reports that Rick Scott, the disgraced hospital executive bankrolling the anti-health reform group Conservatives for Patients’ Rights, is now joining the effort to disrupt health care town halls. The for-profit health industry is contributing a great deal of resources to pressure lawmakers against reform. Last weekend, the health insurance lobby announced that they will be sending staff to “confront” lawmakers at town halls and will be transitioning to negative ads.

We shouldn’t be surprised to learn that he’s endorsed Trump and he has no problem predicting riots if Trump is not allowed the nomination.

FLorida Gov. Rick Scott suggested disgruntled Donald Trump supporters might be justified in rioting if the Republican Party chooses another presidential nominee — but he refused to say whether those upheavals would be violent.

The GOP presidential frontrunner said Wednesday that his supporters could take to the streets if he’s passed over as the nominee at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland.

“I think we will win before getting to the convention,” Trump told CNN. “But I can tell you, if we didn’t and if we’re 20 votes short or if we’re 100 short and we’re at 1,100 and somebody else is at 500 or 400 because we’re way ahead of everybody, I don’t think you can say that we don’t get it automatically, I think you would have riots. I think you would have riots.”

Scott, who has come out in support of Trump following his win Tuesday in Florida’s primary, appeared Thursday on “Fox and Friends” to discuss his endorsement and the possibility of mob violence.

“Clearly the voters are frustrated with party leaders, they don’t trust party leaders right now, so Trump is either going to end up with a majority or pretty close to it, so if we go to the convention and he doesn’t get the nomination, I think the voters are going to be pretty frustrated, and I think it will impact our ability to win in November,” Scott said.

And he knows how to make it happen.

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Property in Australia by @BloggersRUs

Property in Australia
by Tom Sullivan


Photo by Guillaume Blanchard via Creative Commons.

Given the animus in Washington directed at the current Democratic president, my wish list for the 2016 Democratic candidate is pretty modest. There are gubernatorial and other state races that have much more local impact than who occupies 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. So I want only two things: the next two Supreme Court picks and coattails. For the first, I need the Democratic candidate to win. For the second, I need the candidate to win big.

Norm Ornstein and Thomas Mann examine for Atlantic magazine how that might work out. The nominating conventions of both major parties will have a say in that. Ornstein and Mann observe that Cleveland has ordered riot gear for 2,000 in advance of the Republican convention in July:

We may shock you if we say that whatever the circumstances, if Trump does capture the Republican nomination and there is no significant third party or independent effort, he has a chance, however remote it looks now, to win. With America’s tribal politics, any nominee probably starts with a floor of 45 percent of the votes. What if there is serious economic turbulence or a Paris-style attack in the fall? Could enough voters in key states like Ohio and Michigan go to the strong man? It’s possible. And although a Trump presidency would be constrained by the elements of the American political system that have brought gridlock—separated powers, separate institutions, and centers of power—it would not be pretty.

Trump’s monumental ego would be blown up even more by a presidential victory, and his modus operandi in business and the nominating process—telling his subordinates to act with no questions asked, using bluster and intimidation to force others to bend to his will—would be reinforced. He has already threatened House Speaker Paul Ryan with consequences if Ryan does not go along with his desires and priorities. And Ryan, Senate Leader McConnell, and other key Republicans and Democrats would not go along with most of them. Would Trump move unilaterally with executive actions, going far beyond any previous president? The prospect of American leadership in the world under a President Trump is downright frightening. What happens when Mexico and China tell him where to put his demands that they pay for a wall and alter their currencies and trading habits? What if Trump early on faces the kind of international challenge George W. Bush had when China shot down an American plane and refused to give it up? Would Trump react as Bush did, with restraint by using diplomatic means? Would Trump try to use the resources of the executive branch, including the Secret Service, the military, the IRS and intelligence agencies, to force members of Congress, the press and other countries to comply? Perhaps not. But there could quickly be a crisis in governance that has not been seen in generations.

Several Republican groups are taking extreme measures (what else?) to see that that never happens. A delegate-by-delegate fight to keep Trump from securing enough delegates to win nomination on the first ballot is an option, but one at this point with little margin for error. Fielding an independent candidate is a last-ditch measure, but not out of the question. Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol circulated a memo to allies on how that might play out. Others may embrace the hated Sen. Ted Cruz:

About two dozen conservative leaders met Thursday at a private club in Washington, where some pushed for the group to come out for Mr. Cruz to rebut the perception that the stop-Trump campaign was an establishment plot. “If we leave here supporting Cruz, then we’re anti-establishment,” said one participant, who could be heard by a reporter outside.

But the group failed to agree on an endorsement, instead pleading for Mr. Kasich and Mr. Cruz to avoid competing in states where one of them is favored. “They’re going to have to come to terms and lay off each other,” said Erick Erickson, an influential conservative commentator, who convened the meeting.

So far there is not an epidemic of flop sweat in Washington, but that may come even without Zika‘s help. Ornstein and Mann think the prospects for a Trump win is still slim, but not so slim that shopping for property in Australia is out of the question. Given that Trump seems to have no conception of how laws are made nor how political rather than commercial deals are made, it could be a long time before a President Trump “would or could recognize the reality of governing in a democracy.”

“If Republicans in Congress can’t help themselves from giving a collective middle finger to the outgoing president,” they ask, “how will they treat a new Democratic president?” Exactly why my wish list is so modest.

Synchronicity: Criterion reissues The Manchurian Candidate **** by Dennis Hartley

Saturday Night at the Movies

Synchronicity: Criterion reissues The Manchurian Candidate ****


By Dennis Hartley









Would I block you? I would spend every cent I own, and all I could borrow, to block you. There are people who think of Johnny as a clown and a buffoon, but I do not. I despise John Iselin and everything that Iselinism has come to stand for. I think, if John Iselin were a paid Soviet agent, he could not do more to harm this country than he’s doing now.


from The Manchurian Candidate (1962)


That’s Senator Thomas Jordan (John McGiver), in response to Mrs. Eleanor Shaw Iselin (Angela Lansbury), the wife and political handler of Senator John Yerkes Iselin (James Gragory), who has just asked him if he would have any objection if her McCarthy-esque husband’s name were to be “put forward” at an upcoming political convention. Thank god that’s from a movie, because, well…could you imagine what kind of chaos would ensue in this country if someone who is widely perceived as a “clown and buffoon” were somehow jockeyed into a position of high office…perhaps even the highest office? I mean, that’s purely something that could “only happen in the movies”, amirite?  Anyone?


Here’s what I know. Donald Trump is a phony, a fraud. His promises are as worthless as a degree from Trump University. He’s playing the members of the American public for suckers. He gets a free ride to the White House and all we get is a lousy hat. His domestic policies would lead to recession. His foreign policies would make America and the world less safe. He has neither the temperament nor the judgment to be president and his personal qualities would mean that America would cease to be a shining city on a hill.


-from Mitt Romney’s recent speech regarding Donald Trump’s bid for the presidency


Who said that? Mitt Romney? Really? He denounced his own party’s steamrolling frontrunner in the race for the Republican presidential nominee? I suppose I see some parallels between Donald Trump and the fictional Senator Iselin, but let’s keep this in mind…director John Frankenheimer’s Cold War thriller was made 54 years ago. And the story itself is set in the early 1950s, at the height of the Red Scare. Those were different times! Back then, the political climate was informed by fear and paranoia. You actually had politicians publicly calling each other commies, fergawdsakes. What is that line in the film, where Senator Jordan is explaining to Senator Iselin’s stepson Raymond Shaw (Laurence Harvey) the chief reasons for the political enmity between himself and the insufferable tag team of Raymond’s Red-baiting stepfather and control freak mother…?


One of your mother’s more endearing traits is her tendency to refer to anyone who disagrees with her about anything as a communist.


Yes, that was it. See? That was then, but this is now. Donald Trump doesn’t go that far.


Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump on Saturday blamed supporters of Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders for protests that shut down his Chicago rally, calling the U.S. senator from Vermont “our communist friend”.


-from The Raw Story (March 12)


Oh. But, in the film, it’s the candidate’s wife who is described as a Red-baiter, so let’s not get carried away. Because if that were the case, this would be getting pretty darn spooky.


[Bernie] Sanders is a communist. I was born in a communist country, so I know when I see them or hear them.


-Donald Trump’s ex-wife Ivana (from Page Six, March 15)


All right…now it’s getting pretty darn spooky.










Speaking of “spooky”, in January of 2011, in my armchair psychologist’s attempt to answer “Why?” regarding yet another mass shooting, I explored the pathology of the perversely “All-American” phenomenon known as the “lone gunman” via what morphed into a rather wordy genre study. In the piece, I posed some questions. What is the motivation? Madness? Political beef? A cry for attention? What is to blame? Society? Demagoguery? Legislative torpor? The internet? Then, prompted by last year’s horrible Charleston church shooting, I felt compelled to republish a revised version of that piece.


In the intro to that revised posting, I noted an unsettling similarity between something Republican presidential hopeful Donald Trump said in his official campaign kickoff speech to what the Charleston shooter had allegedly said to his victims just one day later:


“When Mexico sends its people (to America), they are not sending their best… (Mexican immigrants) are bringing drugs and they are bringing crime, and they’re rapists.”


-from Donald Trump’s speech announcing his presidential bid, June 16, 2015


“(African-Americans) rape our women and you’re taking over our country.”


-Charleston shooter’s statement to his victims before opening fire, June 17, 2015


Was it coincidence, or was it cause-and-effect? I drew no conclusions then, nor do I now.  At any rate, my point is…one of the films I analyzed in the post was The Manchurian Candidate, which is now available in a newly restored 4K Blu-ray edition from Criterion.


The story is set after the Korean War. Frank Sinatra stars as former POW Major Bennett Marco. Marco and his platoon were captured by the Soviets and transported to Manchuria for a period, then released. As a consequence, Marco suffers from (what we would now call) PTSD, in the form of recurring nightmares. Marco’s memories of the captivity are hazy; but he suspects his dreams hold the key. His suspicions are confirmed when he hears from several fellow POWs, who are share specific (and disturbing) details in their dreams involving the platoon’s sergeant, Raymond Shaw. As the mystery unfolds, a byzantine conspiracy is uncovered, involving brainwashing, subterfuge and assassination.


I’ve watched this film maybe 9 or 10 times over the years, and I must say that it’s held up remarkably well, despite a few dated trappings. It works on a number of levels; as a conspiracy thriller, political satire, and a perverse family melodrama. Interestingly, every time I see it, it strikes me more and more as a black comedy; which could be attributable to its prescient nature (perhaps the political reality has finally caught up with its more far-fetched elements…which now makes it a closer cousin to Dr. Strangelove and Network).


Indeed, I found myself laughing out loud at lines like “Yak dung…tastes good, like a cigarette should!” and  â€śâ€¦having been relieved of those uniquely American symptoms of guilt and fear, he cannot possibly give himself away” (both delivered by droll scene-stealer Khigh Dhiegh, as the Manchurian brainwashing expert). Sinatra is given one of the most quotable lines: “Mr. Secretary-I’m kinda new at this job, but I don’t think it’s good public relations to talk that way to a United States senator…even if he is an idiot.” The intelligent screenplay was adapted from Richard Condon’s novel by George Axelrod.


Good performances abound, but Lansbury is the standout, with a magnificent turn as one of cinema’s greatest heavies. Harvey is heartbreaking as the tortured Raymond. Sinatra is, well, Sinatra (i.e. uneven). It’s been well-documented that he was never a fan of doing multiple takes; frankly it shows and works against him here, particularly whenever he lapses into that Rat Pack patois (he recounts a dream as “one swinger of a nightmare”). It’s not enough to sink the film, but those moments do take Sinatra out of his character.


As usual, Criterion packs in some worthwhile extras. They port over the 1997 commentary track by the director that was done for the original MGM DVD release, as well as an 8-minute roundtable between Frankenheimer, screenwriter Axelrod and Sinatra that was recorded in 1987. New supplements exclusive to this edition include a recent 11-minute interview with Lansbury (engaging as ever at 89), a 21-minute interview with historian Susan Carruthers, and an enlightening 16-minute appreciation by documentary filmmaker Errol Morris, who gleans a few subtexts I’ve never picked up on. That’s one mark of a truly great film-the more times you “watch” it, the more you’ll see.


More reviews at Den of Cinema
Dennis Hartley

Blocking traffic

Blocking traffic

by digby

A lot of people seem very upset that some protesters blocked traffic on the way to the Trump rally in Arizona today. Here are some pictures:

Oh wait, sorry. Those were rightwingers blocking buses containing child refugees in the summer of 2014. They were patriotic citizens exercicing their 1st Amendment rights.

Here’s the horror that happened today to some safe and well-off white people driving their cars:

The humanity.

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A random sampling of the obsessions of a 12 year old’s mind

A random sampling of the obsessions of a 12 year old’s mind

by digby

For those of you who aren’t on twitter every day, here’s a look at how the GOP front runner spends his time.

(That one’s particularly rich considering his new bromances with Christie and Carson.  But needless to say, self-awareness isn’t his strong suit.