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September 24, 2007

Paul Krugman: Politics in Black and White

Filed under: Quote — Volt @ 11:38 am

Paul Krugman, The New York Times, September 24, 2007

Last Thursday there was a huge march in Jena, La., to protest the harsh and unequal treatment of six black students arrested in the beating of a white classmate. Students who hung nooses to warn blacks not to sit under a “white” tree were suspended for three days; on the other hand, the students accused in the beating were initially charged with second-degree attempted murder.

And one of the Jena Six remains in jail, even though appeals courts have voided his conviction on the grounds that he was improperly tried as an adult.

Many press accounts of the march have a tone of amazement. Scenes like those in Jena, the stories seemed to imply, belonged in the 1960s, not the 21st century. The headline on the New York Times report, “Protest in Louisiana Case Echoes the Civil Rights Era,” was fairly typical.

But the reality is that things haven’t changed nearly as much as people think. Racial tension, especially in the South, has never gone away, and has never stopped being important. And race remains one of the defining factors in modern American politics.

Consider voting in last year’s Congressional elections. Republicans, as President Bush conceded, received a “thumping,” with almost every major demographic group turning against them. The one big exception was Southern whites, 62 percent of whom voted Republican in House races.

And yes, Southern white exceptionalism is about race, much more than it is about moral values, religion, support for the military or other explanations sometimes offered. There’s a large statistical literature on the subject, whose conclusion is summed up by the political scientist Thomas F. Schaller in his book “Whistling Past Dixie”: “Despite the best efforts of Republican spinmeisters to depict American conservatism as a nonracial phenomenon, the partisan impact of racial attitudes in the South is stronger today than in the past.”

Read More Here

September 23, 2007

Apparently the Original Lyrics for ‘God Bless America’ were Too Liberal

Filed under: Opinion — Volt @ 10:46 am

For those who didn’t have the opportunity to watch the Values Voter Debate last evening, you missed quite a display of political pandering, ridiculous rhetoric and all-around right-wing lunacy. You also missed this lovely rendition of “God Bless America” performed by the Church of God Choir, from Springfield, Ohio – reworded to better reflect the Right’s agenda.

Lyrics transcribed below:

Why should God bless America?
She’s forgotten he exists
And has turned her back
On everything that made her what she is

Why should God stand beside her
Through the night with the light from his hand?
God have mercy on America
Forgive her sin and heal our land

The courts ruled prayer out of our schools
In June of ‘62
Told the children “you are your own God now
So you can make the rules”
O say can you see what that choice
Has cost us to this day
America, one nation under God, has gone astray

Read More Here

Bootmaker to Bush and Fox jailed in US

Filed under: News — Peregrin @ 9:40 am

Link

By LISA J. ADAMS, Associated Press WriterSat Sep 22, 12:10 AM ET

A bootmaker to world leaders, including President Bush and Vicente Fox, is in a Colorado jail, charged with money laundering and conspiring to illegally smuggle the skins of protected animals into the U.S. to provide exotic footwear for high-end clients.

The arrest of Martin Villegas — and Mexico’s raid of a warehouse filled with hundreds of cowboy boots and belts made from endangered species — has raised questions about how much Fox knew of the scheme and whether the former Mexican president purchased illegal boots himself.

Notice how nowhere in the story is the same question asked of Bush? How many endangered species does he like to walk on?

Greenspan speaks – Grimgold

Filed under: Uncategorized — grimgold @ 9:38 am

Greenspan speaks.

Greenspan (the former Federal Reserve chief) is in favor of money that slowly inflates and worries about the danger of it then getting out of control and throwing us back into the Carter era of double digit inflation.

Here are his quotes below, picked out of an article on AOL:

He also predicts interest rates will reach double digits in the coming years in order to thwart inflation.

A self-described “libertarian Republican,” Greenspan takes his own party to task for forsaking conservative principles that favor small government.

(more…)

Bush’s Iraq War Fills Up Military Cemetery in Kansas

Filed under: News — Volt @ 8:58 am

Reuters, September 22, 2007

OVERLAND PARK, Kansas (Reuters) -A Kansas military cemetery has run out of space after two burials in the last week, including that of an Iraq war casualty, officials said on Thursday.

“We are full,” said Alison Kohler, spokeswoman for the Fort Riley U.S. Army post, home of the 1st Infantry Division.

U.S. Sens. Sam Brownback and Pat Roberts, both Kansas Republicans, on Thursday sent a letter to William Tuerk, the under secretary for memorial affairs at the Department of Veterans Affairs, urging for full funding for a new cemetery for Fort Riley.

“While a new cemetery would not be completed in time to alleviate this situation immediately, it is vitally important,” Roberts and Brownback, a Republican presidential candidate, said in their letter.

“We truly owe our military members a debt of gratitude and the least we can do is provide them with an honorable burial ground,” the senators wrote.

Read More Here

Dianne Feinstein — Symbol of the Worthless Beltway Democrats

Filed under: Opinion — Volt @ 8:20 am

Glenn Greenwald, Salon, September 23, 2007

In the wake of the series of profound failures that define the 2007 Democratic Congress, there is much debate over what accounts for this behavior. There are almost 300 “Congressional Democrats” and they are not a monolithic group. Some of them are unrelenting defenders of their core liberal political values and some are committed to providing meaningful opposition to the radicalism and corruption of the Bush administration. But as the sorry record of the 2007 Congress conclusively proves, they are easily outnumbered in the House and Senate — especially the Senate — by Bush-enabling and Bush-supporting Democrats.

The standard excuse offered by many apologists for Bush-enabling Democrats — that they support the Bush agenda and capitulate to the right-wing noise machine due to political fear of being depicted as too liberal or “soft on terror” — is clearly inapplicable to many, if not most, of the enablers. California’s Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein provides a perfect case study for understanding why the Congress has done virtually nothing to oppose the most extreme Bush policies, while doing much actively to support it.

Feinstein represents a deep blue state and was just easily re-elected to her third term last year. She won’t run for re-election, if she ever does, until 2012, when she will be 80 years old. Her state easily re-elected a Senator, Barbara Boxer, with a much more liberal voting record than Feinstein’s. Political fear cannot possibly explain her loyal support for the Bush agenda on the most critical issues decided by the Senate.

Additionally, Feinstein is a 74-year-old divorced Jewish woman currently on her third husband, and it is thus extremely unlikely that she harbors any hopes of running in the future on a national ticket. She has as secure a political position as any politician in the country. Whatever explains what she does, it has nothing to do with “spinelessness” or fear. What would she possibly fear?

Read More Here

September 22, 2007

Frank Rich: Pardon Poor Larry Craig

Filed under: Opinion — Volt @ 9:28 pm

Frank Rich, The New York Times, September 23, 2007

“I did nothing wrong,” said Larry Craig at the start of his long national nightmare as America’s favorite running, or perhaps sitting, gag. That’s the truth. Justice lovers of all sexual persuasions must rally to save the Idaho senator before he is forced to prematurely evacuate his seat.

Time’s running out. The final reckoning may arrive this week. On Wednesday, a Minnesota court will hear Mr. Craig’s argument to throw out the guilty plea he submitted by mail after being caught in a June sex sting in the Minneapolis airport. If he succeeds, there’s a chance he might rescind his decision to resign from the Senate on Sept. 30. Either way, he should hold tight.

Not only did the senator do nothing wrong, but in scandal he has proved the national treasure that he never was in his salad days as a pork-seeking party hack. In the past month he has served as an invaluable human Geiger counter for hypocrisy on the left and right alike. He has been an unexpected boon not just to the nation’s double-entendre comedy industry but to the imploding Republican Party. Gays, not all of them closeted, may be among the last minority groups with some representation in the increasingly monochromatic G.O.P. If it is to muster even a rainbow-lite coalition for 2008, it could use Larry Craig in the trenches.

On the legal front, Mr. Craig is not without his semi-spirited defenders, an eclectic group including Arlen Specter, the A.C.L.U., The Washington Post’s editorial page and scattered Democrats. While there’s widespread agreement that Mr. Craig was an idiot not to consult a lawyer before entering a guilty plea (for disorderly conduct, a misdemeanor carrying a $575 fine), idiocy is no more a federal offense than hypocrisy, especially in Washington.

Read More Here

Drew Westen: Democrats Outflanked on Iraq

Filed under: Opinion — Volt @ 9:09 pm

Drew Westen, The Huffington Post, September 22, 2007

In a press conference Thursday, the president labeled MoveOn’s recent ad in the New York Times “disgusting” and questioned the patriotism of Democrats who refused to repudiate it. Those were disingenuous words from a president who was either silent or complicit in the whisper campaign against John McCain in the 2000 primary election (which suggested that McCain’s years as a prisoner of war had left him a little unbalanced) and who said nothing as an “independent” organization attacked the metals of a decorated war veteran, John Kerry, in the 2004 election while American boots were on the ground in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Rather than calling attention to the president’s faux outrage at attacks on a military man and the fact that the real outrage is his steadfast refusal to stop playing Russian Roulette with other people’s children without a clear exit strategy or even a realistic definition any more of “success” that doesn’t shift like the sand depending on which guidepost is no longer even visible in the desert, Senate Democrats took the bait. The same Congress that has never held anyone accountable for the policy that has left 30,000 American soldiers dead or wounded, largely by incendiary devices, suddenly mustered a rousing 72-vote majority to condemn an incendiary turn of phrase.

In a scene that is now all too familiar, Democrats were once again outflanked, playing checkers while the other side played chess, worrying about the next move (“They’ll say we don’t support our troops”) while Republicans were thinking several moves ahead. For years they had allowed Republicans to elide the war on al Qaeda with the war in Iraq with the carefully crafted phrase, “the war on terror”–and they allowed them yet again to reinforce the association between the two by permitting General Petraeus to testify about Iraq on September 11. For years they have allowed the Republicans to blur the distinction between supporting our men and women in uniform and deploying them to referee a civil war in the desert with the phrase, “support our troops.’

Now, in hastily supporting a Republican-crafted resolution just like the ones used while the Republicans were in the majority to trap Democrats into unpopular stands readily taken out of context for campaign ads, Democrats yet again allowed Republicans to mix and match messages that have no logical relation to one another, eliding respect for Petraeus as a general, support for his conclusions, and support for our men and women in uniform: “To express the sense of the Senate that General David II. Petraeus, Commanding General, Multi-National Force-Iraq, deserves the full support of the Senate and strongly condemn personal attacks on the honor and integrity of General Petraeus and all members of the United States Armed Forces.”

Read More Here

September 21, 2007

Paris Hilton – Hated in Germany, Too?

Filed under: News — idealistferret @ 10:20 pm

On my way home from work, I was listening to the radio and I wound up having to sit through a few minutes of celebrity “news.” (Don’t blame me; the radio doesn’t work right!) Anyway, one of the items of “news” was about how Paris Hilton had been banned from Germany’s Octoberfest due to the clothing that she wore to last year’s Octoberfest. For one thing, I have to wonder how famous one has to be to have their fashion choices remembered a year later. For another, I wondered whether the Germans were actually offended by Paris Hilton or whether they were banning her because they hate her for the same nonreasons as the average American.

Its A Miracle

Filed under: Toon — Volt @ 8:51 pm

MIA

Filed under: Toon — Volt @ 6:48 pm

BartCop.com Volume 2042 – Lame Duck Sauce

Filed under: BartCop Page — Chicago Jim @ 1:56 pm

BartCop.com Volume 2042 – Lame Duck Sauce

BartCop.com Volume 2042 - Lame Duck Sauce top toon

In Today’s Tequila Treehouse…

Arrow Bush’s Tribunals  
Arrow The Godmongers HOT
Arrow Bush admit mistakes?
Arrow Preparations for War HOT
Arrow Palast hires Taserboy? 
Arrow Tazer nation 
Arrow Krug’s What I Hate
Arrow Cheney Likes Mukasey
Arrow Keira Knightly knickers  

Bush Quotes

Filed under: Uncategorized — Bart @ 8:35 am

“For all those who ask whether the fight in Iraq is worth it, imagine an Iraq where militia groups backed by Iran control large parts of the country.”
– America’s Bloody President

Imagine an Iraq that wasn’t a problem until a little boy with a hardon for oil invaded.

Imagine 3,792 still-living soldiers eating supper with their wives and kids every night.

Imagine the World Trade Centers still standing.

Imagine the US Treasury spilling over with surplus money.

Imagine a world where America isn’t hated.

Imagine a president who could watch football and chew a pretzel at the same time.

Imagine a president who could be honest about the times he’s been arrested.

Imagine a president who didn’t giggle when he ordered the deaths of others.

Imagine a president who put in a 40 hour work week, 48 weeks a year.

Imagine a president who wasn’t following orders of a non-existent entity.

Imagine a president who embraced science over religious insanity.

Imagine a Commander in Chief who listened to his generals.

Imagine a president who believed in the Rule of Law.

Imagine a president who respected the US Constitution.

Imagine a president who could testify under oath.

Imagine a president of the people, instead of of the oil companies.
(Reminder: A barrel of oil was $19 in 2002 – now it’s $82)

How the Democrats Can Woo the Religious Right without Selling Their Souls

Filed under: Uncategorized — idealistferret @ 8:12 am

A couple of posts ago, I explained why I feel that it is time for the Democrats to reconsider the possible support of the religious right. Now I would like to take a moment to give a few strategies for how this could be done.

1. Defang the leadership of the religious right. While nothing beats a good sex scandal for this, there are (perfectly legal) steps that can be taken to reach the same ends. A little law could be incorporated into a large bill that no Congressperson will take the time to read that requires any non-profit group with more than 1000 members to send annual financial statements, including the salaries of the leadership, to every contributing member on the roles. I know for a fact that some of the pastors of the “megachurches” make high-six-figure incomes. If the rank and file knows this, some of them will realize that they are being fleeced in the name of God. This also opens the door for accounting scandals as well, as some of these unethical bastards will try to cook the books.

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Will the GOP Rise Again?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Bart @ 8:11 am

R. Jay Sand

I’m old enough to remember the corrupt Nixon (is that redundant?) era first hand. Whenever I ponder that fact, it makes me very nervous about history’s annoying habit of repeating itself. It also reminds me that my family lost a beloved, young relative to the then raging war in Vietnam and that once again -decades later- young Americans are coming home in flag draped coffins by the score. Again, a very unpopular but extremely profitable war rages on. It doesn’t take a degree in political science to realize that what happened then is frighteningly similar to the horrors of the present.

After Nixon’s disgrace, some of us thought that it would be a very long time before another Republican president would be allowed to serve. When an unknown Democrat named Jimmy Carter was elected, that solidified our beliefs that the GOP was dead in the water. How wrong we indeed were!

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Paul Krugman: Health Care Hopes

Filed under: Opinion — Volt @ 6:57 am

Paul Krugman, The New York Times, September 21, 2007

All the evidence suggests that it has finally become politically possible to give Americans what citizens of every other advanced nation already have: guaranteed health insurance. The economics of universal health care are sound, and polls show strong public support for guaranteed care. The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.

Unfortunately, there’s a lot of that around.

True, one kind of fear seems, provisionally, to have been overcome: the timidity of Democratic politicians scarred by the failure of the original Clinton health plan.

To see how much things have changed, consider Hillary Clinton’s evolution. Just 15 months ago, The New York Times reported that “her plans to expand coverage are tempered and incremental,” and that “she continues to shy from the ultimate challenge: describing what a comprehensive Democratic health care plan would look like.”

Indeed, when she was asked how costs might be controlled, she demurred: “It depends on what kind of system you’re devising. And that’s still not at all clear to me, what the body politic will bear.”

But that was then.

Read More Here

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