Daily Archives: Saturday, February 14, 2009

Gregg’s admission reveals what we already surmised (with certainty about 100%)

Gregg, interviewed on CNBC after withdrawing his nomination for Commerce Secretary:

Carl Quintanilla: Well, Senator, since you were nominated it’s become quite clear that the margin that the president is going to rely on in the Senate has come down to really three Senators.”

Sen. Gregg: I think it’s always been that margin.  Huffington Post

Putting this in that rarely spoken dialect, Old Honest, we get:

The claims/suggestions from my party that we had any intention at all of voting other than to obstruct en masse were and are complete bullshit.

How to ‘antique’ your auto

Driving into an Australian dust storm.

h/t Andrew Sullivan

Limbaugh says it again: “I want everything he is doing to fail”

From Steve Benen at Washington Monthly

February 14, 2009

ROOTING FOR FAILURE…. Rush Limbaugh caused a bit of a stir about a month ago, when he told his audience, “I disagree fervently with the people on our [Republican] side of the aisle who have caved and who say, ‘Well, I hope [President Obama] succeeds.’ … I hope Obama fails. Somebody’s gotta say it.”

The right-wing host went on a similar tirade yesterday when talking about the economic recovery package: “I want everything he’s doing to fail… I want the stimulus package to fail…. I do not want this to succeed.”

Limbaugh is, without ambiguity, rooting for failure. In the midst of an economic crisis, Limbaugh quite openly admitted that if Obama’s economic policies are successful, it would undermine the talk-show host’s worldview. As such, Limbaugh wants desperately to see more Americans suffer, more workers unemployed, more businesses close up shop. The key here is philosophy — if government spending can stimulate the economy, as it always does, then the right is wrong. Limbaugh would much prefer a suffering nation than a reevaluation of conservative ideas.

Keep in mind, of course, that such talk under Bush’s presidency would force someone from the airwaves. If a prominent progressive figure said, just as the president was sending troops into war in early 2003, “I want everything he’s doing to fail. I want the war in Iraq to fail. I do not want the president’s national security agenda to succeed,” he or she would lose all advertising revenue and be fired. In the midst of a crisis, Americans rooting against America, based on nothing but ideological rigidity, are pariahs.

Or, at least, they used to be.

Similar sentiments are even found coming from members of Congress. Take Sen. David Vitter (R-La.), best known for getting caught in a prostitution scandal, talking to a Federalist Society gathering this week.

According to Vitter, the GOP is basically betting the farm that the stimulus package is going to fail, and the party wants Democrats to go down with it. “Our next goal is to make President Obama and liberal Democrats in Congress own it completely,” he said. Instead of coming up with serious measures to save the economy, the party intends to devote its time to an “we told you so” agenda that will include GOP-only hearings on the bill’s impact in the coming months to highlight the bill’s purportedly wasteful elements and shortcomings.

While Vitter seemed to think this was a brilliant new political tactic, voters might be less enthusiastic than Federalist Society members about politicians who spend the next 18 months rooting for the economy to get worse, just to prove a point.

But, in Vitter’s world, that’s the price you apparently have to pay for sticking to your principles, call girls be damned.

 

 

Remember, these clowns like to maintain the fiction that Republicans have the high ground on patriotism

As I’ve noted previously, Bill Kristol’s famous ’93 memo to Republicans re stopping the Clinton health care proposals fretted ONLY about future Republican electoral chances…nothing about Americans who suffer unnecessary health and economic woes within the present system and who would gain from the proposals.   These people really live in territory which is shamelessly amoral.

“Stop health care initiatives” propaganda campaign update

The Washington Times runs a scare piece and attaches a photo of Hitler (in paper and online)

This is going to get much worse.  Very big corporate money will do pretty much anything it can to kill health care changes now as it did in ’93/’94.  We’re just seeing the beginning.

h/t media matters

Mark Halperin (Time) again pushes Republican propaganda line

HALPERIN: The other thing he could have done…you can go for centrist compromises and say to your own party, “Sorry, some of you liberals aren’t going to like it, but I’m going to change this legislation radically to get a big centrist majority rather than an all-Democratic vote.” He chose not to do that. That’s the exact path that George Bush took for most of his presidency with disastrous consequences for bipartisanship and solving big problems.  Huffington Post

As I’ve detailed previously, a key theme of the Republican/conservative propaganda campaign to reframe Obama in the public mind (through repetition in media discourse) has been to suggest that there is nothing new about him, that he does not represent change at all.  And one technique they’ve used throughout this has been to suggest commonalities between Bush and Obama.

Halperin isn’t a fool.  He suffers from the myopia of his insider world and he’s a propagandist.  He does this sort of thing rather too often for one to presume it unwitting.

Propaganda + serious mental imbalance + meagre IQ = Glenn Beck

This boy is in trouble.  Yet he’s perfect for Fox.

Referring yesterday to Beverly Eckert, the 9/11 widow who was killed in the recent Buffalo plane crash, Beck said: 

 After the attacks, she became a vocal activist for families of 9/11 victims. She pushed for the 9/11 Commission. She demanded answers from the government, and helped win the passage of the Intelligence Reform law.

But in 2005, here’s what Beck was saying:

You know, it took me about a year to start hating the 9/11 victims’ families. It took me about a year. Um, and I had such compassion for them and I really, you know, I wanted to help them, and I was behind — let’s give them money, let’s get them started, and all of this stuff. And I really didn’t — all the 3,000 victims’ families, I don’t hate all of them, I hate about, probably about ten of them. But when I see 9/11 victim family, you know, on television, or whatever, I’m just like, ‘Oh, shut up.‘ I’m so sick of them. Because they’re always complaining. And we did our best for them. And again, it’s only about ten.

from Crooks and Liars

Beautiful

The sun will rise in the east and Bristol Palin’s boyfriend’s mom now has a high-powered attorney

 

PALMER, Alaska — Sherry Johnston came to court Friday morning with an entourage — son Levi, daughter Mercedes, and her new attorney, prominent Anchorage defense lawyer Rex Butler.

Johnston left with a new trial date: May instead of March.

The 42-year-old pleaded not guilty last month to six felony counts of possessing and selling the prescription painkiller OxyContin.

Investigators with the Mat-Su drug unit arrested Johnston in December at her home off Wasilla-Fishhook Road. She sold pills in the Wasilla Target parking lot to informants working with investigators, according to court documents filed by Alaska State Troopers.

Her arrest received national attention because her son, Levi Johnston, 18, is the father of Gov. Sarah Palin’s grandson, Tripp, born in December.

The Johnston family joined about 20 other people waiting for hearings in Palmer Superior Court on Friday morning. Sherry Johnston, neatly dressed in a white hoodie sweater, sat next to Mercedes and a second unidentified teenage boy. Johnston and her husband, Keith, are in the midst of an amicable divorce, she has said.

With the presidential election over and the national media long gone, no one paid special attention to the group, though Superior Court Judge Eric Smith did ask one of the young men to remove his ball cap.

Butler told Smith that he filed notice Friday morning that he was taking over as Johnston’s lawyer, replacing a state-funded attorney from the Office of Public Advocacy. He asked Smith to push back the trial to allow him to get up to speed on the case.

Smith set a new trial date of May 18.

Butler, one of the busiest defense attorneys in Anchorage, has represented high-profile clients and murder defendants including Michael Lawson, the Anchorage man sentenced to 99 years in the killing of 21-year-old Talkeetna resident Bethany Correira, and Josef F. Boehm, the businessman sentenced to 11 years for his role in an underage drug and sex trafficking ring.  McClatchy/Anchorage Daily News

You’re surprised?

GOP Lawmakers Tout Projects in the Stimulus Bill They Opposed

WASHINGTON — Rep. John Mica was gushing after the House of Representatives voted Friday to pass the big stimulus plan.

“I applaud President Obama’s recognition that high-speed rail should be part of America’s future,” the Florida Republican beamed in a press release.

Yet Mica had just joined every other GOP House member in voting against the $787.2 billion economic recovery plan.

Republicans echoed their party line over and over during the debate: “This bill is loaded with wasteful deficit spending on the majority’s favorite government programs,” as Minority Whip Eric Cantor, R-Va., put it.

But Mica wasn’t alone in touting what he saw as the bill’s virtues. Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska, also had nice things to say in a press release.

Young boasted that he “won a victory for the Alaska Native contracting program and other Alaska small business owners last night in H.R. 1, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.”

One provision would have made it harder for minority businesses to win contracts, and Young explained that he “worked with members on the other side of the aisle to make the case for these programs, and was able to get the provision pulled from the bill.”

Yet later in the day Young — who recently told McClatchy that he would’ve included earmarks, or local projects, in the bill if it had been permitted — issued another statement blasting the overall measure.

“This bill was not a stimulus bill. It was a vehicle for pet projects, and that’s wrong,” he protested.  full McClatchy story here

Republican primaries – where the extremists go to breed and make more of their own kind

Arlen Specter, Republican Senator from PA who was one of three Republicans to vote for the stimulus bill, describes a conversation with another Republican senator who voted ‘no’:

“When I came back to the cloak room after coming to the agreement a week ago today,” said Specter, “one of my colleagues said, ‘Arlen, I’m proud of you.’ My Republican colleague said, ‘Arlen, I’m proud of you.’ I said, ‘Are you going to vote with me?’ And he said, ‘No, I might have a primary.’ And I said, ‘Well, you know very well I’m going to have a primary.’” Huffington Post

What he is talking about here is the primary election pressure that is and will be brought to bear on any sitting Republican in Congress or Senate who fails to vote in accordance with the wishes of the extremist elements in the party.  Insufficient ideological purity means somebody to the right of you will challenge you in the primary and that challenger will have the advantage of big pots of money and organizational support to the end of defeating you, you heretic. 

Further, what are effectively propaganda campaigns waged against such moderates will commonly be directed by someone(s) like Grover Norquist who will engage the assistance of local and national talk radio (and other such outlets) to magnify and echo the attack.  What makes such a dynamic relatively easy is that primaries bring out a very small percentage of the Republican voters in any region and those folks are mostly the serious activists (read, the more extreme party members) who take their cues from talk radio and other such voices.   See the following for a fine example:  Specter is Porker of the Year

In his last primary battle, Specter barely beat out a far more radical challenger who had been supported in precisely these ways.

And, if you were to put “Grover Norquist” on a google news alert (as I have) you’ll get a good idea of just how active this guy is across the country at federal and state levels pushing his party to its modern extremes.

Update: As a case in point, see Charlie Crist has impure thoughts

Today’s quote

Karl Rove is sceduled to appear before the House Judiciary Committee on Feb 23.  His lawyer, Luskin, has asked for another delay even while Rove has publicly said he won’t appear.   Here’s a portion of chair John Conyer’s letter replying to Luskin:

Given Mr. Rove’s public statements that he does not intend to comply with the subpoena, I am puzzled as to why Mr. Rove needs a mutually convenient date to fail to appear.

h/t  TPM

Josh Marshall on a dumb meme

For my part, I don’t think there’s any problem with having party line votes where both parties really fundamentally disagree on the policy question at hand. But to the extent that there’s a question of who’s making an effort to operate in a bipartisan manner, this one is really not even close. Reporters’ idea that the entire ‘bipartisan’ enterprise is Obama’s responsibility, as though Republicans, in their depleted state, actually get to dictate the content of bills — I don’t think people buy that. Which is probably why Obama’s still really popular and congressional Republicans are extremely unpopular.   Talking Points Memo/

Blackwater tries to sneak into hiding in plain sight

The brand “Blackwater” has gotten pretty much sullied what with all those murders it has committed, the nutball christianity of its founder and family, the thousands of hires it has made from that delicious pool of Pinochet death-squad dudes, from apartheid-era South Africa we-are-better-than-the-colored-people police, and from pretty much every ugly totalitarian/murderous corner of the world.

So they are going to change the name to “Xe”. TPM carries the story on Blackwater=Xe

The pronounciation is “Z”.   Why not use that letter?  Possibly, it is an evil letter (Satan is a tricky bugger).  A assume they chucked a million bucks over to a marketing consulting firm that specializes in the psychology of words and phrases for product or corporate naming.

Udate:  good piece here from News Observer
And I’ll remind again that you aren’t likely to fully get how ugly and powerful this mercenary crowd has become (and how ideologically extreme Blackwater’s management is) without reading Scahill’s book Blackwater

Drat!

The Minnesota election court has just handed down a very important ruling that will determine the entire course of the rest of this trial — and it’s very bad news for Norm Coleman, cutting off multiple avenues he was pursuing in order to get more votes for himself thrown into the count.

Yesterday the court heard arguments regarding the campaigns’ positions on 19 categories of rejected absentee ballot envelopes, and whether the voters should be cut sufficient slack as to allow the ballot in. The court has now handed down a ruling on 13 of those categories — and it’s an emphatic No.   Coleman Blues

Krugman

Ownership Society Watch

The new Survey of Consumer Finances shows an increase in family net worth between 2004 and 2007 — but estimates, based on stock and housing prices, that all of that gain and more has been wiped out since then. Adjusted for inflation, families are poorer now than they were in 2001.

It’s worth pointing out that with this release, yet another pillar of the what-me-worry school of economics has fallen. You may remember that a few years ago there was a lot of talk about how only bubbleheads paid attention to our low, low savings rate, because the truth was that Americans were getting steadily wealthier thanks to rising asset values.

On the upside, she’ll now be able to leaf through her automobile insurance policy

An American woman listed in the Guinness Book of World Records for her long fingernails has lost them in a car crash.  

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