Wednesday, September 30, 2009
When wingnuts attack
Taking power at the point of a gun from the duly elected President non-violently honors and defends the Constitution.
They don't have the slightest idea what simple words mean. They put words in two categories, good and bad. Any word in the good category they assign to themselves, irrespective of its meaning. Any word in the bad category we get. That's how we came to be socialist/fascist/communist liberals.
What happens when those of us who are true to our founders' ideals fight them for our Constitution? Are they then going to spill our blood? Will they then claim that their junta only spilled blood that doesn't matter?
Civility for me but not for thee
"It's a very simple plan," Grayson said in the speech Tuesday night. "Don't get sick. That's what the Republicans have in mind. And if you get sick America, the Republican health care plan is this: die quickly."Three absurdities of American politics in one small CNN item:
- Democrat Alan Grayson says some impolite things about the Republican refusal even to have a health plan, and the Republicans go apeshit with wounded offense - yes, the same party that has been trumpeting lies about death panels and socialism and losing your doctor and keep your filthy government hands off my Medicare!
- The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee is too lily-livered to have a comment before they see how this plays out, when they should come out with guns blazing in defense of a brave voice in the wilderness.
- The media utterly fails to provide the obvious context of Republican lies.
You want civil discourse? You Republicans have to hold yourselves to civility. Until you do, no mercy from me.
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Fiscal conservative oxymoron
The upshot: The so-called fiscal conservatives on the committee voted against fiscal conservatism, voted to keep us on an unsustainable path of expense growth. If we were actually getting better health care, we might find a way to sustain the growth. But we aren't.
We're paying more for less. That's what the conservatives, Democrat and Republican alike, voted for. Is that what any of their constituents would actually choose if they were well-informed?
These Senators voted for insurance company profits over any other interest or principle. Is there a more plausible explanation?
Update (9/30): This is everywhere in the blogosphere - Atrios, Ezra Klein, Kos, and Eschaton again. How many decades before the big media apologizes for failing again to deliver the facts front and center?
Party of torture
For the GOP, torture is no longer a "necessary evil." It is a rally [sic] cry, a "values" issue like same-sex marriage or abortion. They don't "grudgingly" support torture, they applaud it. They celebrate it. Liz Cheney's unequivocal support for torture methods gleaned from communist China has people begging her to run for office.
Sunday, September 27, 2009
Wrong kind of growth

We need a new definition.
Friday, September 25, 2009
Concierge voting
Without juries and voting, I wonder what exactly she thinks our form of government is about. Was even the Magna Carta a mistake? She's in the right party, though, the party that's opposed to government. She was standing on principle! Though it is odd that she now wants to run the state that is home to more than one in eight Americans.
Maybe she would have been able to grace us with her votes if her city hall or voting precinct had had concierge service to allow her to skip waiting in line with hoi polloi. Airports and the FAA are getting this. Restaurants and even hospitals provide valet parking. Couldn't we make it easier for the long-suffering high-self-esteem population to cut line in front of the rest of us, as is their due? Oh, pity the poor wealthy!
Watch this story. The Sacramento Bee broke it, referencing a Business Week story from 2000, and CNN brought it to my attention. If it were about a Democrat, Fox would go wall-to-wall on it. But Whitman is a Republican. Will this die quietly with no louder criticism than tut-tut?
Update: No mention on Fox...
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Brown polyester
DNR
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Mighty oak
Monday, September 21, 2009
Get a room
[O]ne person’s vision of a cleaner, safer park is another person’s possible civil rights violation. Some are concerned that the patrols may be targeting gay men, who often use the reeds as cover for their trysts.Some years ago, the SJC ruled, against all reason, that the police could not raid gay hook-up sites along highways, that to send grown-ups indoors for sex is illegal discrimination.
You be the judge: Am I just unsympathetic to claims that amount to a civil right to have sex in public places? Or am I just jealous that I'm not having sex outdoors too?
Self-entitlement
What’s wrong with financial-industry compensation? In a nutshell, bank executives are lavishly rewarded if they deliver big short-term profits — but aren’t correspondingly punished if they later suffer even bigger losses. This encourages excessive risk-taking: some of the men most responsible for the current crisis walked away immensely rich from the bonuses they earned in the good years, even though the high-risk strategies that led to those bonuses eventually decimated their companies, taking down a large part of the financial system in the process.
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Saturday, September 19, 2009
Keynes was too expensive
Friday, September 18, 2009
Slightly less insane
Could CNN, ABC, MSNBC, NBC, and CBS finally learn to consider the source?
One other thing to notice: When their ox is gored, media outlets have no trouble whatsoever calling a falsehood false. If only they'd be so bold when Republicans lie...
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Argotamine poisoning
Strangulation is better than “traumatic asphyxia” caused by “neck compression.”
Suspect is better than person of interest.
Longer is often not better. See my first clause above. Individuals!? People! (Or persons if you're using 1930s vocabulary.)
Colin Ferguson protection act
It's risky to parse big media too closely. Which is true about the bill that allows guns on Amtrak?
- "allows individuals to bring their guns on trains in a manner similar to that of airlines", or
- "Before checking the bag or boarding the train, the passenger must declare that the firearm or pistol is in his or her bag and is unloaded." (emphasis added)
Side note for Republicans who want to verify everything regarding immigration status (papers please!), two of the three provisions that CNN calls out amount to: you're a gun owner; hey, we trust you.
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
First draught of history
Any history of this period that's not a revisionist history will purvey the thoroughgoing bullshit of our age.
(h/t Philosoraptor)
Conceding South Carolina
Democrats don't need another Blue Dog , and that district is not going to elect even a moderate.
Censuring "Joe" casts in high relief the difference between Democrats and Republicans, and that helps Democrats. Helping South Carolina Republicans, who were going to win everything that matters in the Palmetto bug state, is a small price to pay.
Monday, September 14, 2009
Rope-a-dope ain't working
What got Van Jones fired was they caught him on tape saying that Republicans are assholes. And they call it "news." And Obama didn't say a word in defense of Jones and basically fired him when Glenn Beck told him to. Just like we dropped "end of life counseling" from health care reform because Sarah Palin said it meant "death panels" on her Facebook page.
Crazy evil morons make up things for Obama to do, and he does it.
Sunday, September 13, 2009
Reverse Robin Hood
Saturday, September 12, 2009
In which loath is used correctly
The one thing that unites [tea party movement activists] seems to be a sense of inchoate rage. Although mentioning it makes them really, really mad.
Please sir, may I have another
Maybe changes were needed in this area. But to make them right now rewards the worst elements of American politics.
Any idiot would know that. But apparently not the Democratic leadership in the Senate.
Folding the Cards
Friday, September 11, 2009
Stand with the snitch
On this strange and mournful day
As a defender of rationality rather than sticking my head in the sand, I know that there's no guarantee of the continued providence of safety. But maybe we can all agree on the hope of our continued safety and argue about credit at leisure.
Thursday, September 10, 2009
Job qualification
Still, Wilson will not lose his seat in Congress in 2010. His voters think that being an asshole in defense of know-nothing wingnut conservatism is exactly what qualifies him for the job. He stood up to Barack Hussein Obama, gol'darnit! Wilson's constituents think Barry Goldwater went soft, although they'd have "Extremism in defense of liberty is no vice" chiseled on their tombstones if it didn't take up so much space.
Update: See!
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
Another orphan of a bankrupt culture
Galloping individual bankruptcies from medical costs are incontrovertible. Nearly one of every 100 Americans will be in a family that declares bankruptcy this year alone because it can't afford treatment. Republicans and Blue Dog Democrats don't care.
Medical costs next will bankrupt the country. We now pay waaay more than any other country for our medical care. Our government's per capita expenditures top those of every other country on earth except Norway and Luxembourg. Then we add on an even greater amount of private expenditures. For mediocre outcomes.
These cost problems cannot be solved by an individual mandate in the absence of a public option. Even a public option is only a tepid half-measure that might lead to what's really needed - single-payer.
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
Let's invade Iraq
If they did this in Texas, it might make sense. Here in Massachusetts, even illegal aliens would help retain a seat in Congress that's much more likely to frame immigration policy in a non-punitive way that might build a path to citizenship that's not too onerous.
I have to wonder who's paying for this.
Another failure
Furthermore, the Garridos' private prison is not in a rural area. It's in a neighborhood that borders a few fields.
Monday, September 7, 2009
Wingnut rope-a-dope
Of course, the President's political people need to be ready to respond to each fresh Glenn Beck outrage with Youtube mash-ups of the worst nutjobs.
Pro-labor
Currently, Revere High School students who have parental approval can receive free condoms and prescriptions for birth control pills.
Yet half the country hates labor
Sunday, September 6, 2009
Perfect storm
Never forgets
No one's tellin' me nuthin'
Saturday, September 5, 2009
What was it Santayana said?
Mulligan has suggested, in particular, that workers are choosing to remain unemployed because that improves their odds of receiving mortgage relief. And Cochrane declares that high unemployment is actually good: “We should have a recession. People who spend their lives pounding nails in Nevada need something else to do.”Personally, I think this is crazy. Why should it take mass unemployment across the whole nation to get carpenters to move out of Nevada? Can anyone seriously claim that we’ve lost 6.7 million jobs because fewer Americans want to work? But it was inevitable that freshwater economists would find themselves trapped in this cul-de-sac: if you start from the assumption that people are perfectly rational and markets are perfectly efficient, you have to conclude that unemployment is voluntary and recessions are desirable.
A nation of assholes
This hysteria is mostly driven by the right, though not quite completely. But it infects me, too, to name only a single minor example. There are days when I don't easily find my arsenals of snark and sarcasm - the best rhetorical weapons against frothing stupid rage - and I defend myself and my ideals from attacks with strong counterattacks.Most often, the haters have succeeded in turning political discourse into a war of attrition against their personal demons -a war won by those who can go nuclear the fastest.
That's clearly been the story of the summer on health care - and it continues to be the story on most major issues. I mean, conservatives are quite literally calling the president's plan to promote the value of education to the nation's schoolchildren a secret socialist plot. All of it has convinced me we are living through one of the darkest periods in the last 50 years - one in which intense hatred has now become an accepted - even celebrated - part of our democracy.
I'd rather be an asshole myself than a sap. I wish that were not my choice. As a nation, we need to find a way to broaden our choices from the current polarization.
Left-wing terrorism
We should be glad that the liberal establishment doesn't have raving lunatics in the media fanning the flames of its fringes, the way the conservative establishment does. Unlike conservatives, who often defend their extremes, liberals don't.
There's a key difference between right-wing fringe violence and left-wing fringe violence: The right-wing fringe kills people; the left-wing fringe kills radio towers.
Who we ah
Until I got to New England, I had no idea I had a Southern accent. My college roommates quickly disabused me of the idea that having educated parents had immunized me against regional speech. In time, I overcame my initial distaste for regional New England accents, and I now appreciate them for their distinctiveness even as they sink into the great gray homogenized mix standardized by electronic media.
Mordred rules
A central theme of "Camelot" (the musical, not the Kennedy drama) is that the king is bound by law, too. Republicans such as John Ashcroft (though he's hardly the most extreme) could find no law that they would not run roughshod over. The fact that they would hold a man for more than two weeks on a pretext is just one more in a long series of usurpations.
Yet conservatives now want to refresh the tree of liberty. Glenn Beck thinks (I use the word think metaphorically) President Obama achieved coup by election. There's just no oxy in the man.
The Republican Party is a blight on American politics and, until responsible conservatives excise it, America will be unable to make the rational public policy decisions and compromises that are required for the survival of our democracy.
Friday, September 4, 2009
What they're afraid of
Really, though, the sanity of the true believers is beside the point. As long as the raving loons in the bilious wingnut media are primed to go nuclear against any Democrat who dares to show his face in public, no matter how innocently, I'm not willing to give their intelligence or their good faith the benefit of the doubt.
Wingnuts are afraid that their children might get a good impression of Barack Obama and come home wondering what else their parents are lying to them about. Could fundamentalism be bullshit? Could evolution be true? Was Jesus really a liberal? Could sex for something besides procreation be a good thing? Even for unmarried people? Even for gay and lesbian people? Could a little recreational - or even medicinal - marijuana be acceptable?
The right and their bullshit issue arsonists in their media want to live in an ultraconservative, fundie ghetto.
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Example for Scotland
I guess the Manson family, unlike Libya, has nothing anyone wants.
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Rule of thumb
Alexander also complained the White House has cut Republicans out of talks.The Republican Party thinks it has the right to be an abusive spouse. No matter what lies and abuse it heaps upon the Democrats, no matter what slanders and borderline threats it utters against President Obama, it expects to be politely, even timorously, invited to the table to negotiate. Good faith isn't even up for negotiation.
"Either they don't know how to operate in a bipartisan way or they don't want to operate in a bipartisan way," he said.
The rule of thumb: When ugly partisans pick up the stick of bipartisanship, they're asking you to let them smack you around.
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
Reliquary of a saint
Greenwald's a big boy, though, and doesn't need my puny defense. Nor does aimai. I've noticed that she can handle herself.
Still, my fellow travellers in the left blogosphere annoy me in one way when they back aimai. She's I.F. Stone's granddaughter! they protest. As if that mattered a whit. As if she had touched the hem of his shroud and was therefore gifted with sacred powers to see through the ever-present bullshit of the big media.
I realize that many are using this identification simply to extend her handle. Others, though, imply that she deserves admission to the conversation because of it. Identity is not central to this dust-up at all. Quite the contrary in fact.
Aimai's commentary has always stood as her own, not that of the priestess of a dead saint. I found it trenchant and incisive and insightful enough long before I knew her pedigree. I remembered her handle and knew when I happened upon her commentary that she would be worth reading.
This is an earned reputation, not the fruit of admission to an elite. Aimai didn't get her credibility through Washington nepotism. Unlike Joe Klein, she hasn't relied on obeisant touches of reliquaries. She has done her homework instead.
Don't forget that that's the path to real credibility.
By any other name
What I'd like to see is more than a one-time nod to simpler yesteryear in wry promotion of a newly published book. Harvard's students - and professors, too - need more reinforcement of the proud old and now disused habit of bullshit detection. More than passing familiarity with its odor would be a good place to start.
(Yes, I know that Faith, neƩ Pride, is not actually a bull, but there's a sweet little joke in that, too. In these welcome days of feminism, why shouldn't a cow be equally able to instruct in the art of literal bullshit?)
Joining the bullshit parade
Adrian Walker knows the Massachusetts legislature has been on summer recess, but he stamps his foot and demands action now. As if journalists themselves don't typically send their brains on vacation for the entire silly season of August...
Maybe that explains Walker's column.