Daily Archives: Sunday, March 1, 2009

Sunday, fishin’ day

Those guitar notes ring pretty damn sweetly.

Today’s quiz (difficulty level – Does the pope shit in the Cedars of Lebanon)

If the economy comes back, the group in power stays in power. It’s that simple.
Bay Buchanan, CPAC

Now, this leads us to today’s quiz (50 points on this one but it’s multiple choice): 

Link the idea above to Limbaugh’s statement that he wants Obama to fail.  Will the conservative movement, for perceived political gain,  strategize and operate in a manner which will facilitate the failure of the economy to recover?

Yes_________

Obviously________

Matt Bai’s NY Times Magazine piece on Gingrich, “Newt, Again”

I’ll note and link it here but it’s really not very interesting or informative, unfortunately, other than in giving some glimpse of what the fellow is up to currently (which certainly could prove important in the next two or four years).

A much more interesting and revealing study of the man was written by Joan Didion for The New York Review of Books,  later included in a compilation of her essays for them, titled ”Political Fictions”, a truly invaluable book for those interested in American politics over the last two or three decades.

For a mere $3, you can order her piece on Gingrich from the NYR archives right here right now.  You’ve got some better use for 12 measely quarters?

Orwellian headline of the day

Adjectives Get Evicted

Gripping, seat-of-the-pants-exciting story here

Quote of the day – “This Old Kremlin” category

Socialism is a bold color concept for conservatives 
Bay Buchanan at CPAC

 

Mark Leibovich on the terrifying return of “socialism”

The two big coming battles

They will be health care and the Employee Free Choice Act.  Gingrich describes the latter as “a mortal threat to American freedom” and the earlier Clinton initiative to modify health care in ’93 set the vested interests (and the RNC) into a full-on “stop them or we are doomed” mode.

But times have changed.  Here’s what the left is doing behind the scenes in support of Obama’s initiatives on health care.

Waves of cool, refreshing sanity wash about my unusually handsome ankles

Obama’s Backin Raises Hopes for Climate Pact

…But within weeks of taking office, President Obama has radically shifted the global equation, placing the United States at the forefront of the international climate effort and raising hopes that an effective international accord might be possible. Mr. Obama’s chief climate negotiator, Todd Stern, said last week that the United States would be involved in the negotiation of a new treaty — to be signed in Copenhagen in December — “in a robust way.”   refreshments available here

Bobby Jindal – A victim of the populist anti-intellectualism of modern conservatism

Aside from Jindal’s weird religiosity and a few other unhappy ideological leanings, he is, at least, a very bright and thoughtful fellow who clearly didn’t share the movement disdain for higher education and the life of the mind.  But is there any chance at all that the present makeup of this movement would have permitted him to speak or behave in such a manner?  And it’s hard to muster up much sympathy when the fellow contributes to his own victimization with such an easy facility. 

What such G.O.P. “stars” as Sanford and Jindal have in common, besides their callous neo-Hoover ideology, are their phony efforts to portray themselves as populist heroes. Their role model is W., that brush-clearing “rancher” by way of Andover, Yale and Harvard. Listening to Jindal talk Tuesday night about his immigrant father’s inability to pay for an obstetrician, you’d never guess that at the time his father was an engineer and his mother an L.S.U. doctoral candidate in nuclear physics. Sanford’s first political ad in 2002 told of how growing up on his “family’s farm” taught him “about hard work and responsibility.” That “farm,” the Charlotte Observer reported, was a historic plantation appraised at $1.5 million in the early 1980s. From that hardscrabble background, he struggled on to an internship at Goldman Sachs.   Frank Rich

Polling after Obama’s address to congress

Over on Greg Sargant’s blog at the Washington Post, The Plum Line, I advanced my opinion on how expertly Obama handled his address to Congress last week.  Polling by CBS suggests that I wasn’t over-stating the case:

Just because

More epistles from the slammer

Conrad Black interviewed on life in jail

John Derbyshire on Rush and talk radio (highly recommended)

From The American Conservative magazine

…are there some downsides to conservative talk radio? Taking the conservative project as a whole—limited government, fiscal prudence, equality under law, personal liberty, patriotism, realism abroad—has talk radio helped or hurt? All those good things are plainly off the table for the next four years at least, a prospect that conservatives can only view with anguish. Did the Limbaughs, Hannitys, Savages, and Ingrahams lead us to this sorry state of affairs?

They surely did. At the very least, by yoking themselves to the clueless George W. Bush and his free-spending administration, they helped create the great debt bubble that has now burst so spectacularly. The big names, too, were all uncritical of the decade-long (at least) efforts to “build democracy” in no-account nations with politically primitive populations. Sean Hannity called the Iraq War a “massive success,” and in January 2008 deemed the U.S. economy “phenomenal.”

Much as their blind loyalty discredited the Right, perhaps the worst effect of Limbaugh et al. has been their draining away of political energy from what might have been a much more worthwhile project: the fostering of a middlebrow conservatism. There is nothing wrong with lowbrow conservatism. It’s energizing and fun. What’s wrong is the impression fixed in the minds of too many Americans that conservatism is always lowbrow, an impression our enemies gleefully reinforce when the opportunity arises. Thus a liberal like E.J. Dionne can write, “The cause of Edmund Burke, Leo Strauss, Robert Nisbet and William F. Buckley Jr. is now in the hands of Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity. … Reason has been overwhelmed by propaganda, ideas by slogans.” Talk radio has contributed mightily to this development.

At a recent dinner party with a group of psychoanalysts and educators, I asked whether anyone listened to Limbaugh.  The representative answer was a rhetorical, “Why would I?!”  That’s an entirely reasonable response, of course.   But on the other hand, I don’t think it’s possible to understand contemporary American politics unless one does listen to talk radio at least occasionally.  There’s no question that neither the Clinton impeachment nor the Bush election would not have occurred in the absence of conservative talk radio and both those events were extremely consequential.  And if one is to understand how the tenor of discourse in America has descended to its present level, then one must attend to conservative talk radio.

But, as I’ve argued earlier here, there’s a consequence not just for the nation but for “conservatism” as well.

Much as their blind loyalty discredited the Right, perhaps the worst effect of Limbaugh et al. has been their draining away of political energy from what might have been a much more worthwhile project: the fostering of a middlebrow conservatism. There is nothing wrong with lowbrow conservatism. It’s energizing and fun. What’s wrong is the impression fixed in the minds of too many Americans that conservatism is always lowbrow, an impression our enemies gleefully reinforce when the opportunity arises. Thus a liberal like E.J. Dionne can write, “The cause of Edmund Burke, Leo Strauss, Robert Nisbet and William F. Buckley Jr. is now in the hands of Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity. … Reason has been overwhelmed by propaganda, ideas by slogans.” Talk radio has contributed mightily to this development.

It does so by routinely descending into the ad hominem—Feminazis instead of feminism—and catering to reflex rather than thought. Where once conservatism had been about individualism, talk radio now rallies the mob. “Revolt against the masses?” asked Jeffrey Hart. “Limbaugh is the masses.”

 

Was Santelli’s rant set up?

What we discovered is that Santelli’s “rant” was not at all spontaneous as his alleged fans claim, but rather it was a carefully-planned trigger for the anti-Obama campaign. In PR terms, his February 19th call for a “Chicago Tea Party” was the launch event of a carefully organized and sophisticated PR campaign, one in which Santelli served as a frontman, using the CNBC airwaves for publicity, for the some of the craziest and sleaziest rightwing oligarch clans this country has ever produced. Namely, the Koch family, the multibilllionaire owners of the largest private corporation in America, and funders of scores of rightwing thinktanks and advocacy groups, from the Cato Institute and Reason Magazine to FreedomWorks. The scion of the Koch family, Fred Koch, was a co-founder of the notorious extremist-rightwing John Birch Society.”    more here

h/t Digby