Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Worried about a gas tax?
But, not to worry all you frothing anti-tax teabaggers: He doesn't have the votes, not even close, at least not in the House. It takes 81. Fifty would be a miracle.
Editorial decision
Darth does get off one unforgettable line:
"I think that it's just a matter of time before the party begins to sort of firm up around a few key individuals, and we'll hear big things from them in the future," Cheney said.And here I thought firming up around key individuals was the problem that Ensign and Sanford had.
Monday, June 29, 2009
WWCD?
"This is President Obama saying 'Well, we have to cover this up, because there's such terrible torture things we did, people will get angry about it.'Disbarment is a negligible consequence, but at least it's some small punishment for torture.
That's why we prosecute it, you don't conceal that. That's what the Soviet Union would do, that's what China would do, not the United States of America," [Bruce Fein, a former senior Justice Department official in the Reagan administration,] said.
Wrong lesson from history
- The only way to equalize cost pressures faced by American manufacturers is to make sure that competing foreign products face them at the border.
- Of course, that same fairness rationale works against other ardent market-based sprints to the bottom - other environmental concerns, labor standards, etc.
- Smoot-Hawley. Raising tariffs in a recession is canonically bad.
- Tariffs blunt comparative advantage and thus the economies of globalization.
Only, no, these carbon tariffs aren't due to take effect until 2020. If the economy is still dead by then, only Michelle Obama will be eligible for the Presidency, and I'm sure Congress can remain true to form and delay them if need be.
Today, Krugman weighs in:
[I]n this case the non-economic objective is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, never mind their source. If you only impose restrictions on greenhouse gas emissions from domestic sources, you give consumers no incentive to avoid purchasing products that cause emissions in other countries; as a result, you have an inefficient outcome even from a world point of view. So border adjustments here are entirely legitimate in terms of basic economics.So, I've thought about this again, and I now see that the first two points outweigh the last two.
Culture of hype
I only wanted Mays off my television, not dead, but god, is this what we've come to? At least Michael Jackson had real, honest-to-god talent to accompany his transcendent weirdness.
Sunday, June 28, 2009
David Vitter watch, day 717
[W]hile Vitter, Ensign, Gingrich and perhaps Sanford have been able to retain their positions and political viability, the same cannot be said for the most recent offenders on the progressive side. Neither Eliot Spitzer nor John Edwards, each among the most promising figures in the Democratic Party, will ever be a candidate for public office again, although their misbehavior was no worse than what their Republican counterparts did.Not to mention, pro-adultery.
Canonical response to bad puns
Saturday, June 27, 2009
Simple, simplistic, simple-minded
Krugman fails to call bullshit on his friends and colleagues quite as vehemently (shrilly?) as he does on politicians. That's understandable, though fortunately his commenters feel no such compunction to politesse.
Wrong
Friday, June 26, 2009
Jesus Glocking Christ
Personally, I can feel manly with only my penis holstered up by my underwear. (No, I don't consider it a concealed weapon.) I don't need a .38 under the front seat of my car or a semiautomatic next to the bed to keep me feeling adequate if someone gives me the finger on the highway or says something about my equipment or skills in bed. These theoretical situations are why I have a brain.
Bottom line: A lot of these people are so far around the bend that they ought not be permitted out on the grounds alone, much less armed. Eventually, one of them will miss when reaching for the toilet paper after squeezing off a round, absentmindedly pick up the bathroom gun, and shoot himself in the ass. I guess that's one way to get ripped a new asshole.
Lip service
Acting like adults about adultery
Now, of course, Sanford is making tremendous gobbets of tabloid news for his disappearance into a love affair. The only reason any of that matters should be the disappearance, not the affair. He did fail to discharge his duties for a week, but lots of people cheat, and we really cannot afford to have all of them resign their positions of responsibility, even if they've been exposed as arrant hypocrites. (Hey, they're Republicans. Hey, they're politicians.)
Fred Thompson, with his own checkered romantic past, belabors Sanford in the great mosh pit of American sexual politics:
I don’t have any sympathy in a situation where you’ve got a wife and four fairly young kids . . . don’t play it out in public.Lots of others are shocked, shocked that Sanford would betray his wife. More than anything, they're shocked that he would betray them - or, if Democrats, shocked and delighted at the opportunity to kill off a rival. For the Republicans, it still mostly seems to be about the sex:
One county GOP leader said the governor “talked about how our leaders have stepped away from our core values, and said one thing on the campaign trail or out in the public and did something different in the background.’’As time passes, we will again find out that some of those calling loudest for Sanford's resignation are even now conducting their own affairs. We could do without this hypocrisy by letting even politicians have a private life with - or, in this case, possibly without - their families.
Update (6/28): I've been corrected on this with a reminder that Sanford himself campaigned on family values, which makes the GOP leader quoted above correct. There does have to be accountability for hypocrisy on all sides.
Thursday, June 25, 2009
Criminalizing ibuprofen
Only Clarence Thomas disagreed. He had the following impeachment-worthy comment:
“Preservation of order, discipline and safety in public schools is simply not the domain of the Constitution.”The Court didn't rule on the policy that led to the strip search, since that policy was not at issue. But I'm not bound to the case; I can say that zero-tolerance policies such as this are stupid, stupid, stupid. They are tools for overzealous martinets to lord their precious authority over children.
I only regret that the Court immunized the idiots who performed this abusive search.
(By the way, the CNN story on this ruling is completely inadequate. Every time a professional journalist publishes a story like that, he proves that blogs are not the problem.)
Acceptable to notice
These people were always crazy. It’s just that for the time being they’re sufficiently weak that it’s considered acceptable to notice.
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Sarah-nades

Update: If the media needs a picture of a pretty woman, how about Elizabeth Banks? She's quite a bit more beautiful than Palin.
I suppose it's too much to ask that we might pick news - and women - on some other criteria.
Click image for source, credit David Shankbone.
What your taxes bought
The American Institutes for Research just published a study that suggests this is a good funding priority:
How can I be happy about Bs? The highest ranked unit in the world, Hong Kong, achieved only a B+. Of course I'd like to beat that. But we're still waaay ahead of the rest of the U.S. and among the elite of the world.The report, issued today by the American Institutes for Research (AIR), based on international performance benchmarks in math for 4th and 8th grade students concluded that only 4th graders in a handful of states – among them Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Hampshire, Kansas and Vermont – are learning at B or B- levels when compared with students internationally.
At Grade 8, only Massachusetts achieves a grade of B.
I expect to blog on this good news a bit more as I read the rest of the study.
(h/t Yglesias)
Program note
There's work, which I'd like to keep doing, and sometimes that calls for extra efforts. This is one of those times. Plus, the IS people are now blocking Blogger logins, so it's harder for me to file items, though not impossible. I actually agree with this policy, though ideally I'd like for them to relax it on the lunch hour.
I've been playing piss-loads of tennis, too. Since I learned in midlife, I'm not that good at it, but I enjoy it. And the drinking afterward. Especially with a carefully selected few. Alone in days this week, I have today off from whacking a yellow ball, but I plan to update my friend's state rep web site instead of blogging continuously. I'll probably ice my knees and stretch my back while I riff HTML.
I've also been trying to get household affairs in order after long neglect. That won't be over soon, but at least I'm going to get new tires on my car later today.
Meanwhile, consider this an open thread. Hell, y'all don't need me to start the next fight.
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Situational ethics

Conservatives unwittingly reveal that they actually believe that President Obama can change an adversary into a friendly liberal democracy simply by talking. Of course, it is still true that they think his words have to match their foolish posturing.
Hey, does that mullah look like Darth Cheney to you?
Click image for full Tom Tomorrow/Salon cartoon.
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Circles and arrows

Click image for full Bruce Beattie cartoon.
Friday, June 19, 2009
Where Obama's support is a negative
Good government, bad politics
“Until I can comment thoughtfully and with some study, I’m going to withhold comment,’’ [Gov. Deval] Patrick told reporters yesterday.But let's call it what it is: an austerity budget with some but probably not enough good reforms.
Oops! Not dust
The ayatollahs still run things, but the state claims it's a democracy. For Ali Khamenei, the fact that the Presidential contenders all pay lip service to the reactionary 1979 revolution gives great solace. It was definitely not a liberal democracy he and his fellow theocrats were looking for.
Khamenei had already made his decision, of course. The only question for the authorities is how to pacify to population to their adherence to Stalin's maxim: The voters decide nothing. Those who count the votes decide everything.
Oh, and the protesters are dust, according to Ahmadinejad, but then they aren't. After all, there are so many of them. Uncountable numbers.
Fundamental flaw
A little more incredulous
"I think we've had a debate about individual policies. We had that debate in particular – we kept score last November and we won," Gibbs said.I would have put a sharper point on my rejoinder: Can you believe this guy? Can you believe that after all the things he botched, he still wants more of the same?
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
How liberals are different
We still leave our own judgement engaged when one of our own is in charge.
My take: If you're overexposed to Obama, you're probably watching too much TV.
Monday, June 15, 2009
Needs of the Republicans
It is simply critical for Republican electoral chances that the stimulus not work, and the best way they can get it not to work is to stop it early. So what if that takes a huge dose of doublethink.
Confession
Norm Coleman is a capable speaker of the wingnut creed.
Why liberals think Republicans harbor racists
Won't hear this on talk radio
[I]f the only way we compared the two systems was with statistics, there is a clear victor. It is becoming increasingly more difficult to dispute the fact that Canada spends less money on health care to get better outcomes.
Sunday, June 14, 2009
For a mess of pottage
Confederacy of dunces
Saturday, June 13, 2009
Republican ballot-counting
This is how it's done:
The authorities closed universities in Tehran, blocked cellphone transmissions and access to Facebook and some other Web sites, and for a second day shut down text-messaging services.And, of course, this shows Khamenei was in on it from the beginning:
Ayatollah Khamenei closed the door to any appeals for intervention in a statement issued on state television on Saturday afternoon, congratulating Mr. Ahmadinejad on his victory and urging the other candidates to throw in the towel. “Our respected president is the president of all the people, including those who were his rivals yesterday, and they should all help and support him,” he said.
Pretty useless picture
CNN has posted some chartjunk that - lo and behold - proves that the heavily populated states will create the most jobs from the stimulus. Well, duh!
What we need from charts like this is a number that explains, not one that is the least possible work. In this case, a much better number would have been new jobs as a percentage of existing employment. Even better might have been new jobs as a proportion of current unemployment.
But either would require a calculator...
Friday, June 12, 2009
Thursday, June 11, 2009
Never mind
Holocaust Museum murderer James von Brunn is waaay beyond Republican even though the average Republican is pretty extreme.
Hysterically - and completely in keeping with Republican denial of awkward reality - Rush Limbaugh among others has been attempting to foist von Brunn off on liberals as one of us.
Oops. Von Brunn despises Obama too.
So much for leftwing political violence...
Even Fox notices
Silence Do-Good may scoff, but there are qualitative and quantitative differences between lunatic loons on the left and frothing wingnuts on the right. To name one, gun ownership...
I'd guess that Shepard Smith is looking to make a career move.
(h/t Philosoraptor, linking to Andrew Sullivan, embedding Talking Points Memo)
He'll have a gasperilla
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
Megalomania knows no species
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Gonna leave a mark
Capitalists selling rope
Much as I would like it
Monday, June 8, 2009
A mess that needs reform
Reform without all the mess
If there's no public option, the option Roy Blunt (R-Status Quo) calls "a non-starter," there's no sense wasting time on a health care bill. Once again, the Republicans are the party of no.
Note to CNN: Blunt is not "heading up health care efforts in the House." He's a Republican in the house which has no filibuster. He doesn't have a leadership role that matters.
Update (6/13): Robert Reich hits this topic in Salon.
Sunday, June 7, 2009
Pressing on
Moral of the story: If you want coverage in this era of shrinking journalism, you have to cover yourself. Even change agents have to adjust to change.
So far, though, there's nothing on Youtube, nothing on massdems.org, and nothing on devalpatrick.com.
Blame Barney Frank
"I doubt this approach would play well with regulators, investors, rating agencies, etc," [John P. McMurray, chief risk officer of Countrywide Financial] wrote. "To some, this approach might seem like we've simply ceded our risk standards and balance sheet to whoever has the most liberal guidelines."Fortunately for them, they don't care about facts.
(h/t Atrios)
Saturday, June 6, 2009
If we're replaying the past
So he wouldn't mind if the Democrats in the Senate threatened to go nuclear.
Sure he wouldn't.
Friday, June 5, 2009
Sine qua non
Thursday, June 4, 2009
A good piece of hickory
Better
I don't think Palin could pass Economics 101. She's never heard of Keynesian stimulus. She doesn't know the difference between private debt and public debt. She has no idea of the vicious cycle of contraction that's still a very real danger."Since when can you get out of huge national debt by creating trillions of dollars of new debt?" [Sarah] Palin asked. "It all really is so backwards and skewed as to sound like absolute nonsense when some of this economic policy is explained."
"We need to be aware of the creation of a fearful population, and fearful lawmakers, being led to believe that big government is the answer, to bail out the private sector, because then government gets to get in there and control it," she said. "And mark my words, this is going to be next, I fear, bail out next debt-ridden states. Then government gets to get in there and control the people."
"Some in Washington would approach our economic woes in ways that absolutely defy Economics 101, and they fly in the face of principles, providing opportunity for industrious Americans to succeed or to fail on their own accord," she said. "Those principles it makes you wonder what the heck some in Washington are trying to accomplish here."
And she "explains" it all as a nefarious plot to take over the country. She has all the analytical skills of Pinky combined with the good will toward his fellow mice of the Brain.
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Fry an egg on Newt's face
Jeff Sessions is making a virtue of the tiny little climb-down Newt did manage by touting Newt's supposedly unusual willingness to admit error.
That's the GOP for you. Throw out the red meat for those in their constituency for whom white privilege isn't large enough, then whisper to the dogs to stop barking.
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
Spare me the euphemisms
Monday, June 1, 2009
Duh!
If you think about motive, this is easier to understand:
The exact size of the H-1B labor force in the U.S. is uncertain because of a lack of accurate data. The U.S. sets a cap of 85,000 H-1B visas annually.If the government really cared, it would make it its business to know this.
I work with lots of foreigners, some who are here on H-1B visas. They're mostly great people, but that doesn't make it good policy to hire them in preference to qualified Americans.
His own Ron Ziegler
The Bushists took office with the PNAC plan to remake the Middle East in their hip pocket.