Monthly Archives: November 2008

Now, who’d expect a fellow like this to engage in spin?

Claim on ‘Myth’ of Obama’s Small Donor Base Challenged
By Greg Mitchell

NEW YORK (Commentary) The Campaign Finance Institute (CFI) study asserting that Barack Obama actually raised most of his campaign money from “larger” not “small” donors has gained wide, often approving, coverage in recent days, from, among others, USA Today, The New York Times and Los Angeles Times, and countless other web sites. Almost inevitably such accounts have held a headline referring to the “myth” of Obama riding a wave of small donations to victory. The study’s author himself uses it.

But the “myth” is actually in the spinning of the report, including by its author, Michael Malbin, a former speechwriter for Dick Cheney, when he was Pentagon chief, and a resident fellow at The American Enterprise Institute from 1977 to 1986.  continue reading here  http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003917724

Quote of the day

“I would like to be a person remembered as a person who, first and foremost, did not sell his soul in order to accommodate the political process”  George W. Bush

Which political process are you speaking of, Mr. President? 

Skipping gracefully past any mention of that double insistence that he actually falls under the category of “person” we could make a bit more sense of this quote by translating it;

“The convincing evidence that I am really a good man and leader who operated on principle and not political considerations is that so many citizens of my own country and of the rest of the world now regret that I ever appeared on the world’s stage.”

Conservatism’s future…determined by its (real) past

The following analysis by Neal Gabler is very bright indeed.  Pieces like this are far too rare in the modern daily papers.  This is a must read. 

Ever since the election, partisans within the Republican Party and observers outside it have been speculating wildly about what direction the GOP will take to revive itself from its disaster. Or, more specifically, which wing of the party will prevail in setting the new Republican course — whether it will be what conservative writer Kathleen Parker has called the “evangelical, right-wing, oogedy-boogedy” branch or the more pragmatic, intellectual, centrist branch. To determine the answer, it helps to understand exactly how Republicans arrived at this spot in the first place.

The creation myth of modern conservatism usually begins with Barry Goldwater, the Arizona senator who was the party’s presidential standard-bearer in 1964 and who, even though he lost in one of the biggest landslides in American electoral history, nevertheless wrested the party from its Eastern establishment wing. Then, Richard Nixon co-opted conservatism, talking like a conservative while governing like a moderate, and drawing the opprobrium of true believers. But Ronald Reagan embraced it wholeheartedly, becoming the patron saint of conservatism and making it the dominant ideology in the country. George W. Bush picked up Reagan’s fallen standard and “conservatized” government even more thoroughly than Reagan had, cheering conservatives until his presidency came crashing down around him. That’s how the story goes.

But there is another rendition of the story of modern conservatism… In this tale, the real father of modern Republicanism is Sen. Joe McCarthy…

The basic problem with the Goldwater tale is that it focuses on ideology and movement building, which few voters have ever really cared about, while the McCarthy tale focuses on electoral strategy, which is where Republicans have excelled…McCarthy was another thing entirely. What he lacked in ideology — and he was no ideologue at all — he made up for in aggression…Henceforth, conservatism would be as much about electoral slash-and-burn as it would be about a policy agenda…

As historian Richard Hofstadter described it in his famous essay, “The Paranoid Style in American Politics,” McCarthyism is a way to build support by playing on the anxieties of Americans, actively convincing them of danger and conspiracy even where these don’t exist

continue reading here http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-gabler30-2008nov30,0,1009632.story

Bobby Jindal…conservative movement biggies turning to him?

This piece in the Washington Post describes what may look like a shift from Palin as new favorite over to Jindal.  Strategically, this makes sense as he seems infinitely better as a candidate against Obama than Palin now looks after her many disasters and in light of her clear lack of brain power and knowledge.  Further, as some of the movement biggies note, he’s young and a man of color and the Republicans cannot win if they continue to put up candidates who disadvantage them electorally with the young and with non-whites.

Talking him up now are Limbaugh, Grover Norquist and even Tony Perkins.  There’s more than a bit of irony in this as Jindal is a Rhodes Scholar (pointy head, intellectual elite) and was a Hindu until college when he became Catholic.  All of which demonstrates how these movement organizers are concerned only with access to power.  Each have personally become very wealthy mouthing populist everyman rhetoric and despising government/Washington while making their fortunes as effective parasites on the system they deride.  They are a pretty disgusting lot.

But if this shift from Palin to Jindal continues to look like their best bet electorally, then somehow Palin is going to have to be given the boot.  They will be working against their own previous propaganda to bring this about which will be somewhat problematic.  They’ll have to convince a large sector of their audience (the ‘base’) to switch the allegiance away from that Palin-creature they created..  And her ambition looks likely to keep her up front unless some ‘revelation’ which would dissafect her with that base comes to light.  Of course, these boys, in their righteousness, can pull revelation from pretty thin air. 

  http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/11/29/AR2008112901777.html?nav=hcmodule

Business and the Pentagon…revolving door (with some help from CNBC)

Access like this does not come cheap, but it was an opportunity potentially worth billions in sales, and Defense Solutions soon found its man. The company signed Barry R. McCaffrey, a retired four-star Army general and military analyst for NBC News, to a consulting contract starting June 15, 2007.

Four days later the general swung into action. He sent a personal note and 15-page briefing packet to David H. Petraeus, the commanding general in Iraq, strongly recommending Defense Solutions and its offer to supply Iraq with 5,000 armored vehicles from Eastern Europe. “No other proposal is quicker, less costly, or more certain to succeed,” he said.

Thus, within days of hiring General McCaffrey, the Defense Solutions sales pitch was in the hands of the American commander with the greatest influence over Iraq’s expanding military.

In the spring of 2007 a tiny military contractor with a slender track record went shopping for a precious Beltway commodity.

The company, Defense Solutions, sought the services of a retired general with national stature, someone who could open doors at the highest levels of government and help it win a huge prize: the right to supply Iraq with thousands of armored vehicles.

“That’s what I pay him for,” Timothy D. Ringgold, chief executive of Defense Solutions, said in an interview.

General McCaffrey did not mention his new contract with Defense Solutions in his letter to General Petraeus. Nor did he disclose it when he went on CNBC that same week and praised the commander Defense Solutions was now counting on for help — “He’s got the heart of a lion” — or when he told Congress the next month that it should immediately supply Iraq with large numbers of armored vehicles and other equipment. 

continue reading here  http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/30/washington/30general.html?hp

We already know, from reporting on many of the ex-military who were brought into the nightly news shows and 24 hour cable news networks before and during the Iraq war, that they were commonly used as propaganda agents run out of Rumsfeld’s department.  In some of those cases, these men also had personal business ties to defense industries that stood to gain from the war.  McCaffrey’s is just one more example on top of those previous ones. 

The major networks have utterly refused to cover or, in most cases, even mention their role in facilitating this propaganda effort.

Drat

The group that persuaded California voters this month to pass Proposition 8, which bans same-sex marriage, now is fighting its friends as well as its foes.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/11/23/BA21149LUL.DTL&type=politics&tsp=1

 

h/t george

Melting houses…chocolate subways…lizards at the bar…all vaguely familiar

 

 

 

Located in Sopot, Poland. Inspired by various fairytale drawings and built by Polish architects Szotyńscy Zaleski, this strange-looking building actually houses a multitude of bars, cafes, and shops.

h/t to friend george

Quote of the day

Looking for information on tiling stairs, I came across these helpful tips that got my project off to an immediate start…

Attendances of stairs in a space have to each other supporting. That cause, appearance of stairs better compatible with room condition. Sometimes stairs made merely serving the traffic fluctuate. Though, be in fact many possibilities of form able to be created from a stairs, besides to go up and go down.

Design the uniqueness and draw surely became the fascination. So also moment you choose to make railing stairs in residence. How it’s for?
Stairs structure consists of the parts of the each other sustaining one another. So that attendance of the element one with other element of interaction. Structure of stair system alone consist of the vertical doorstep child ( riser) for the stepping of doorstep horizontal( tread), the doorstep mother hold the doorstep child ( string), especial pillar ( newel), railing ( handrail), and doorstep fence ( baluster)
Stair is frequently is part of quickest; fastest building experience of damage, because the width relative narrow and wearied relative often. Ceramic installation at stairs will lengthen its age, but needed to pay attention election of ceramic type which attached, it will select by homeowner to the ceramic type which have texture anti slip. In general that ceramic tiling can be attached at most of all room shares. Besides owning functional role, ceramic tiling also have role of aesthetics.

There’s actually a lot more but it hurts bad to read it.

John Mayer and Chris Botti

Beeuuteefull

h/t to my friend Alice

A little bit of propaganda history

Take the Kuwaiti babies story. Its origins go back to the first world war when British propaganda accused the Germans of tossing Belgian babies into the air and catching them on their bayonets. Dusted off and updated for the Gulf war, this version had Iraqi soldiers bursting into a modern Kuwaiti hospital, finding the premature babies ward and then tossing the babies out of incubators so that the incubators could be sent back to Iraq.

The story, improbable from the start, was first reported by the Daily Telegraph in London on September 5 1990. But the story lacked the human element; it was an unverified report, there were no pictures for television and no interviews with mothers grieving over dead babies.

That was soon rectified. An organisation calling itself Citizens for a Free Kuwait (financed by the Kuwaiti government in exile) had signed a $10m contract with the giant American public relations company, Hill & Knowlton, to campaign for American military intervention to oust Iraq from Kuwait.

The Human Rights Caucus of the US Congress was meeting in October and Hill & Knowlton arranged for a 15-year-old Kuwaiti girl to tell the babies’ story before the congressmen. She did it brilliantly, choking with tears at the right moment, her voice breaking as she struggled to continue. The congressional committee knew her only as “Nayirah” and the television segment of her testimony showed anger and resolution on the faces of the congressmen listening to her. President Bush referred to the story six times in the next five weeks as an example of the evil of Saddam’s regime.

In the Senate debate whether to approve military action to force Saddam out of Kuwait, seven senators specifically mentioned the incubator babies atrocity and the final margin in favour of war was just five votes. John R Macarthur’s study of propaganda in the war says that the babies atrocity was a definitive moment in the campaign to prepare the American public for the need to go to war.

It was not until nearly two years later that the truth emerged. The story was a fabrication and a myth, and Nayirah, the teenage Kuwaiti girl, coached and rehearsed by Hill & Knowlton for her appearance before the Congressional Committee, was in fact the daughter of the Kuwaiti ambassador to the United States. By the time Macarthur revealed this, the war was won and over and it did not matter any more.  more here http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,4270014,00.html

h/t digby

Let’s call this Crossfire TwoTube

Delicious, soul-restoring sanity.

Crossfire…Zappa in ’86 and then Stewart

Stock market and Obama

A week ago, the voices of conservative radio, Fox and conservative movement pundits were repeating the claim that the continuing stock market decline was a direct consequence of how that market regarded the future economy under an Obama presidency.

So, after five days of rise in the market, are they now saying that this rise is a direct consequence of how the market regards Obama? 

Of course not.  The facts of things are irrelevant.  Logical consistency is relevant only insofar as they must pull off a snowjob to disguise the blatant inconsistencies.  Damaging Obama is the only thing they are directed towards.  It is their function.

Claude Levi-Strauss turns 100

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/29/books/29levi.html?8dpc

Though I took a number of anthropology and sociology couses when I was at university, I was never assigned to read any of this famous anthropologists writings.  But one professor introduced me to a thesis for which this man is known and I’ve found it an extremely useful tool to help understand why we behave as we do.

His proposition held that the human mind builds a woldview or establishes meaning using a structure of binary opposites; us/them, good/bad, dark/light, sacred/profane, clean/unclean, loyal/traitorous, etc.

It seems to me that whatever else might be going on in the functioning of our minds, this structural basis is real.  This does seem to describe something very fundamental about how we do the job of thinking, assigning meanings and assiging values. 

An observation that I’ve made in the decades since I bumped into Levi-Strauss’ thesis is that individuals vary in their ability to assume some more complicated or nuanced means to think about things.  We all know people who, for whatever set of reasons, have difficulty getting past black/white conceptualizations (e.g., “you’re with us or against us”).

In terms of politics and the uses of propaganda, we can see pretty quickly that a fundamental goal will be to cast issues (or people or policies etc) in these simplistic black/white opposites.  Acknowledgement of complexity and nuance works against simplification, of course.  When we use words like ‘primitive’ or ‘coarse’ to describe political rhetoric, what we are referring to is this intention to cast matters in the unsophisticated terms of either/or. 

Populist rhetoric is absolutely filled with this sort of casting of things.  Read any transcript of Hannity, Limbaugh etc with this in mind, and it puts them in an altogether interesting light.

It also helps us understand, I think, why some americans fall so much more easily than others to the myth of American exceptionalism.  Clearly, it is much simpler (as a cognitive task) to ignore the serious complexity of adjudicating or evaluating America’s footprint on the world and to simply assume it must be positive.

update/edit… It strikes me too that this urge for clear and simple binary oppositions is manifested in those who appear to desire or need or prefer (whatever word is best) a solid distinction between the genders.  That would also have a consequence for their acceptance or rejection of the complexity and nuance associated with same-sex relationships.

Helping out on Black Friday

Purchased 37 boxes of Turkey Helper.

Krugman in NYRB – “What To Do”

What the world needs right now is a rescue operation. The global credit system is in a state of paralysis, and a global slump is building momentum as I write this. Reform of the weaknesses that made this crisis possible is essential, but it can wait a little while. First, we need to deal with the clear and present danger. To do this, policymakers around the world need to do two things: get credit flowing again and prop up spending.

continue reading here  http://www.nybooks.com/articles/22151

Barbara Walters interviews Obama

From Glenn Greenwald – Mumbai, the NYT’s revisionism, and lessons not learned

 

The New York Times Editorial Page, today, on poor U.S./Latin American relations:

[T]he Bush administration did enormous damage to American credibility throughout much of the region when it blessed what turned out to be a failed coup against Mr. Chávez.

Indeed it did.  But what the Times fails to mention, and is apparently eager to erase, is that “the Bush administration” was far from alone in blessing that coup attempt:

The New York Times Editorial Page, April 13, 2002 — one day after the coup:

With yesterday’s resignation of President Hugo Chávez, Venezuelan democracy is no longer threatened by a would-be dictator. Mr. Chávez, a ruinous demagogue, stepped down after the military intervened and handed power to a respected business leader, Pedro Carmona. . . .

Early yesterday [Chávez] was compelled to resign by military commanders unwilling to order their troops to fire on fellow Venezuelans to keep him in power. He is being held at a military base and may face charges in Thursday’s killings.

New presidential elections should be held this year, perhaps at the same time the new Congress is chosen. Some time is needed for plausible national leaders to emerge and parties to reorganize. But Venezuela urgently needs a leader with a strong democratic mandate to clean up the mess, encourage entrepreneurial freedom and slim down and professionalize the bureaucracy.

That was one of the most Orwellian editorials written in the last decade.  The Times — in the very first line — mimicked the claim of the Bush administration that Chavez “resigned,” even though, several paragraphs later, they expressly acknowledged that Chavez “was compelled to resign by military commanders” (the definition of a “coup”).  Further mimicking the administration, the Times perversely celebrated the coup as safeguarding ”Venezuelan democracy” (“Venezuelan democracy is no longer threatened by a would-be dictator”), even though the coup deposed someone whom the Times Editorial itself said “was elected president in 1998″ and — again using the Times‘ own language — “handed power to” an unelected, pro-American “respected business leader, Pedro Carmona,” who quickly proceeded to dissolve the democratically elected National Assembly, the Supreme Court and other key institutions.

Worse still, the Times Editorial mindlessly spouted the administration’s claim that “Washington never publicly demonized Mr. Chávez” and “his removal was a purely Venezuelan affair.”  Yet less than a week later, the Times itself was compelled to report that the Bush administration “acknowledged today that a senior administration official [Assistant Secretary of State Otto Reich] was in contact with Mr. Chávez’s successor on the very day he took over”‘ — a disclosure which, as the Times put it with great understatement, “raised questions as to whether Reich or other officials were stage-managing the takeover by Mr. Carmona.”  

Four days after its pro-coup Editorial, the Times – once Chavez was returned to power in the wake of Carmona’s anti-democratic moves — returned to the topic of Venezuela, once again echoing the official line from Bush officials, who took to condemning the now-failed coup attempt.  The Times, while justifying pro-coup sentiments as understandable, proceeded to denounce that reaction without really apologizing for its own role in endorsing it:

In his three years in office, Mr. Chávez has been such a divisive and demagogic leader that his forced departure last week drew applause at home and in Washington. That reaction, which we shared, overlooked the undemocratic manner in which he was removed. Forcibly unseating a democratically elected leader, no matter how badly he has performed, is never something to cheer.

Despite that, the Times still expressed optimism about the coup, righteously intoning in the first paragraph:  ”we hope Mr. Chávez will act as a more responsible and moderate leader now that he seems to realize the anger he stirred.”

And the Times was hardly alone.  As FAIR documented that week — in a reported entitled ”U.S. Papers Hail Venezuelan Coup as Pro-Democracy Move” — “the editorial boards of several major U.S. newspapers followed the U.S. government’s lead and greeted the news with enthusiasm.”

* * * * *

It’s nice that the Times — with a disgraced George Bush on his way out the door — has come to view the Venezuelan military coup as the destructive, anti-democratic event which, by definition, it was.  And it’s also nice that the Times is now willing to assign blame for anti-U.S. sentiments in Latin America at least partially to the actions of the U.S. Government itself.  But it’s important that the Times not be allowed to delete its own involvement in those events.  Just as was true for Joe Klein’s very similar self-serving revisionism on Wednesday, the point here goes far beyond merely illustrating the dishonesty that lies at the heart of this re-writing of history.  

The Times‘ propagandistic cheer-leading for the military coup in Venezuela is an important illustrative event which should be regretted, but not erased.  There are vital lessons from the last eight years that get obscured when influential outlets such as the Times Editorial Page try to erase their own responsibility for events and heap all blame on “the Bush administration” — which was able to do what it did only because it enjoyed the acquiescence, complicity and often blind support from so many of our leading political and media institutions.  

To this day, Chavez’s hostility towards the U.S. Government (just as is true for the hostility of Iranian and Cuban leaders and many others) is depicted as proof of his dangerous extremism and irrationality — even his mental instability — as though American attempts to dictate who governs other countries will generate anger and resentment only among the Primitive, the Crazed, and the Evil.  More generally, discussions of our own role in spawning anti-American sentiment around the world is still more or less off limits in mainstream discourse, ludicrously demonized as “Blame America First” pathology from anti-American fringes on the radical Left and the isolationist Right.  And our political and media elite continue to bastardize language to justify whatever we do, with “democracy” meaning ”a government that follows U.S. dictates regardless of how it gained and maintains power,” and “dictatorship” meaning ”a government not beholden to U.S. dictates even if they were democratically elected.”

It wasn’t just the Bush administraiton, but most of our media and political elite, which approved of the overthrow of Venezuela’s democratically elected leader and overlooked our own role in it.  There is much to learn from that which the NYT Editorial Board shouldn’t be able to suppress.

* * * * *

But just as importantly, that heinous though typical pro-coup, government-mimicking NYT Editorial was written in April, 2002 — just months after the 9/11 attacks, when the extremism and mindless submission to Government authority that would grip this country for the next several years was still rumbling towards it peak.  The terrorist attacks in India this week serve as a critical reminder of how easily those forces are unleashed.

Any decent, civilized person watching scenes in Mumbai of extremists shooting indiscriminate machine gun fire and launching grenades into civilians crowds — deliberately slaughtering innocent people by the dozens — is going to feel disgust, fury, and a desire for vengeance against the perpetrators, regardless of what precipitated it.  The temptation is great even among the most rational to empower authority to do anything and everything — without limits — to punish those responsible and prevent repeat occurrences.  That’s a natural, even understandable, response.  And it’s the response that the attackers hope to provoke.

It’s that temptation to which most Americans — and our leading media institutions — succumbed in the wake of 9/11, and it’s exactly the reaction that’s most self-destructive.  As documented by this superb Washington Post Op-Ed today from Dileep Padgaonkar, former editor of the Times of India, the Indian Government — in response to prior terrorist attacks — has been employing tactics all-too-familiar to Americans:  ”terrorism suspects have been picked up at random and denied legal rights”; “allegations of torture by police are routine”; “suspects have been held for years as their court cases have dragged on. Convictions have been few and far between”; Muslims and Hindus are subjected to vastly disparate treatment; and much of the most consequential actions take place in secrecy, shielded from public view, debate or accountability.

As Padgaonkar details, many of these measures, particularly in the wake of new terrorist attacks, are emotionally satisfying, yet they do little other than exacerbate the problem, spawn further extremism and resentment, and massively increase the likelihood of further and more reckless attacks — thereby fueling this cycle endlessly — all while degrading the very institutions and values that are ostensibly being defended.  The greater one’s physical or emotional proximity to the attacks, the greater is the danger that one will seek excessively to empower and submit to government authority and cheer for destructive counter-measures which allow few, if any, limits.

What happened in the U.S. over the last eight years is about much, much more than what “the Bush administration” did.  It begins there, but responsibility in the post 9/11-era is much more diffuse and collective than that.  Shoveling it all off on the administration that is leaving, while exonerating our culpable media and political institutions that remain, isn’t merely historically inaccurate and unfair, though it is that.  Allowing that revisionism also ensures that the critical lessons that ought to be learned will instead be easily and quickly forgotten when similar episodes occur here in the future. http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/2008/11/28/nyt/

Little Miss Sunshine

For anyone interested, here’s Michael Arndt speaking at Cody’s Books on his screenplay for the Academy award nominated film…

http://fora.tv/2007/02/15/Little_Miss_Sunshine_Shooting_Script

Can Obama take on the Pentagon?

 

Under President George W. Bush, military spending increased by about 60%, and that’s not including spending on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Eight years ago, as Bush prepared to enter the Oval Office, military spending totaled just over $300 billion. When Obama sets foot in that same office, military spending will total roughly $541 billion, including the Pentagon’s basic budget and nuclear warhead work in the Department of Energy.

And remember, that’s before the Global War on Terror enters the picture. The Pentagon now estimates that military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan will cost at least $170 billion in 2009, pushing total military spending for Obama’s first year to about $711 billion (a number that is mind-bogglingly large and at the same time a relatively conservative estimate that does not, for example, include intelligence funding, veterans’ care, or other security costs).

With such numbers, it’s no surprise that the United States is, by a multiple of nearly six, the biggest military spender in the world. (China’s military budget, the closest competitor, comes in at a “mere” $120 billion.) Still, it can be startling to confront the simple fact that the U.S. alone accounts for nearly half of all global military spending — to be as exact as possible in such a murky area, 48% according to the International Institute for Strategic Studies. That’s more than what the next 45 nations together spend on their militaries on an annual basis.

Again, keep in mind that war spending for 2009 comes on top of the estimated $864 billion that lawmakers have, since 2001, appropriated for the Iraq war and occupation, ongoing military operations in Afghanistan, and other activities associated with the Global War on Terror. In fact, according to an October 2008 report by the Congressional Research Service, total war spending, quite apart from the regular military budget, is already at $922 billion and quickly closing in on the trillion dollar mark.  continue reading this cheery thanksgiving piece by Frida Berrigan here http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/175007/frida_berrigan_who_rules_the_pentagon_

Her Majesty’s a very nice girl but this one is my favoritist Queen