Just how far to the left is Time's Joe Klein? He actually thinks “Keith [Olbermann] is a brilliant writer, and presenter; I always enjoy watching him, even when he's occasionally wrong”: I'm not so sure what this dispute with MSNBC is all about, but I'm sad that Keith won't be around (at least, for a while). If there is a place for the nonsense-spew of Fox News, there has to be a place on my cable dial for Olbermann (who, while occasionally obnoxious, operates from a base of reality–unlike some people we know [see below]). Keith is a brilliant writer, and presenter; I always enjoy watching him, even when he's occasionally wrong. I hope I'll have the opportunity to do so again soon. In the meantime, I hope he'll heed the words of the master and “Go forth, and spread beauty and light.” Go forth and spread beauty and light? Is that what Klein thinks this conveyor of half-truths and invective has been doing the past eight years? Keep that in mind the next time you consider taking Klein seriously.
Continue reading …A suicide bomber set off a deadly explosion in the international terminal of Moscow’s highly trafficked Domodedovo Airport on Monday, killing 31 people and wounding close to 170, according to the Associated Press’ last update. AP via Google News: The international arrivals terminal at Domodedovo Airport was engulfed by smoke and splattered with body parts after the mid-afternoon terror attack sprayed shrapnel, screws and ball bearings at passengers and workers in a loosely guarded area. Hundreds of people were in the area at the time. President Dmitry Medvedev immediately ordered authorities to beef up security at Moscow’s two other commercial airports and other key transport facilities. He also canceled plans to fly out Tuesday to Davos, Switzerland, where he aimed to promote Russia as a profitable investment haven to world business leaders. Monday’s attack was most likely carried out by a suicide bomber and “attempts were being made to identify him,” Investigative Committee spokesman Vladimir Markin said. The Interfax news agency, citing law enforcement sources, said the head of the suspected bomber had been found. Read more Related Entries January 12, 2011 Russia Points to Pilot Error in Polish President’s Crash January 3, 2011 Want to Own a Chunk of Facebook?
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Michele Bachmann’s one-hour speech at an Iowans for Tax Relief event has so many highlights I can’t even decide which ones to share with you, but there are three that stood out for me. This is certainly a preview of what a Bachmann candidacy would look like. Imagine being in the hall of mirrors with the echoing voice repeating nonsense over and over, louder and louder. No matter where you turn it follows you. That’s Bachmann’s speech. Some general observations first. Note the Sarah Palin haircut. It’s eerily similar to the 2008 Palin look. Also, she has been well-coached and this speech was crafted carefully. It’s not an off-the-cuff effort. It was professionally written and crafted to have populist appeal and reach into populist anger, a la Richard Nixon. Many, many times she pivots back to the claim that she is not one of the “Washington elite”, and is “just like YOU.” Now, on to specifics. I. The Biography True to form for potential candidates for President, Bachmann begins with her biography and her Norwegian ancestors who migrated to the United States in the 1840′s. That’s the video at the top of this post. In Bachmann’s narrative, she claims her ancestors left Norway because the government wouldn’t permit an accumulation of wealth, and because the land they had was barren. Scarce farmland is certainly cited as a reason for Norwegian emigration by historians. Inheritance restrictions aside, Norway also limited voters to a small subset of elites, which made the United States a more attractive place to be. And so, we come to contradiction #1 in Bachmann’s world view. This is the one where she loudly proclaims that her ancestors did not come to this country for handouts, welfare and socialized medicine, but for mere opportunity. Oh, and free land. Yes, the free land had much to do with it. So they didn’t come here for handouts, but they came with their hand out for that free land. And eventually, for the farm subsidies that came with farming in the Midwest during the 20th century. The Bachmann family farm received $252,000 between 1995 and 2006 in farm subsidies, which I think might qualify as a “handout”. Click here to view this media II. History Rewrite: Mashing up the Mayflower Compact, Slavery, and Founding Fathers This is probably one of the most significant parts of her speech. Not because any of it is accurate or particularly true, but because it’s carefully crafted to send a very high-pitched dogwhistle to every bigot on the planet. Bachmann begins by rewriting history. Having brought her ancestors over from Norway and into the Midwest via the Dakotas, they have now come to settle in Iowa, where she declares with enthusiasm and aplomb that it “didn’t matter that they spoke different languages, were different colors, came from different countries, they were ‘all the same.’” I’d like to see her tell that to Chinese immigrants of that time with a straight face. In what might be one of the more bizarre linkups, she draws upon the Mayflower Compact as a “founding principle”, referring to it many times as a “covenant”. Of course, the Mayflower Compact included this language: …constitute and frame such just and equal Laws, Ordinances, Acts, Constitutions and Offices, from time to time, as shall be thought most meet and convenient for the general good of the Colony , unto which we promise all due submission and obedience. That ‘general good’ clause lands in our Constitution as the “general welfare” clause. Tut, tut, Michele. You might be a socialist. Even as Bachmann romanticizes the ‘wonder’ of that period in our history, she manages to weave the slavery theme into her tapestry, and in such a bizarre way. First she claims that our founding fathers fought slavery ‘to the death’, citing John Quincy Adams’ opposition to it. Of course, she forgets to tell her audience that John Quincy Adams was a one-term president because he faced rock-solid opposition to his ideas, including abolishing slavery. But, he was a Republican in the traditional sense of the word, and that was really where she was going with it. Her conclusion is really the most significant, where she claims we are a “self-correcting nation” and ending slavery was a “self-correcting act.” In this segment, she never mentions that the end to slavery came via a bloody civil war that isn’t over to this day , nor did she bother to mention that it was ended by the sweep of a Presidential proclamation — a unilateral act which bypassed Congress. For Bachmann, the battlegrounds are different, but the war rages on. She ties all of this up in a bow with the claim that the 2010 midterm elections were a major step forward on the path to self-correction now, too, because that’s what self-correcting nations do. Although the parallels were more subtle, this was a call to “take our nation back,” a call she amplifies in the final clip. III. Kill ObamaCare; Repeal the President Click here to view this media Now we finally come to the heart of the matter, the reason for Bachmann’s presence before these people. This is the linchpin of any possible candidacy, and she’s playing it here for the choir and the crowd. Her statements on the House floor during the Affordable Care Act repeal vote were no accident. She said ” repeal the President ” then, and she said it again here. They are absolutely intentional. Here’s my translation of the “repeal the President” call. Repeal is defined as “abolition of law”. Putting it in her context, it is yet another way to de-legitimize Barack Obama’s presidency. Instead of calling for a challenge, or to take the Presidency back in 2012, calling for a repeal of the President suggests it was wrong for him to be President at all. It is subtle, intentional, and full of even louder, shriller dog whistle. It is, in effect, a call for a coup d’etat. She isn’t calling for an election. She’s calling for an impeachment, an abolition . You really have to listen to her say this. The sequence is important. “Kill ObamaCare. Repeal the President.” Interesting too that she says this MUST be done in 2012. She’s right, because by 2016, it will be fully in effect and enough people will be benefitting to make it stick. By 2016, Bachmann will be claiming credit for it because she’ll have no other choice. IV. It’s a mistake to write Bachmann off as a wingnut We do so at our own peril. She may be previewing her own candidacy, or she may be previewing Sarah Palin’s. One thing is sure: Their message will be identical. Rick Perlstein wrote this at the end of his wonderful book Nixonland : “What Richard Nixon left behind was the very terms of our national self-image: a notion that there are two kinds of Americans. On the one side, the “Silent Majority.” The “nonshouters.” The middle-class, middle American, suburban, exurban, and rural coalition who call themselves, now, “Values voters,” “people of faith,” “patriots,” or even, simply, “Republicans” — and who feel themselves condescended to by snobby opinion-making elites, and who rage about un-Americans, anti-Christians, amoralists, aliens. On the other side are the “liberals,” the “cosmopolitans,” the “intellectuals,” the “professionals” — “Democrats,” who say they see shouting in opposition to injustice as a higher form of patriotism. Or say “live and let live.” Who believe that to have “values” has more to do with a willingness to extend aid to the downtrodden than where, or if, you happen to worship — but who look down on the first category as unwitting dupes of feckless elites who exploit sentimental pieties to aggrandize their wealth, start wars, ruin lives. Both populations — to speak in ideal types — are equally, essentially, tragically American. And both have learned to consider the other not quite American at all. The argument over Richard Nixon, pro and con, gave us the language for this war.” He concludes with this: Do Americans not hate each other enough to fantasize about killing one another, in cold blood, over political and cultural disagreements? It would be hard to argue they do not. How did Nixonland end? It has not ended yet. Bachmann’s speech was the next chapter in the war. She delivered it this time, and to those of us who have paid attention to history, it sounds like nothing more than bizarre, wingnutty nonsense. But it has clear signals to those with ears to hear, and it’s worth paying attention to how they respond. There will be no excuse for being caught off-guard this time around, like we were with the town halls. The signals are there, the strategy clear. Bachmann is building her own Nixonland and inviting all to join her.
Continue reading …I think protecting the Senate filibuster rules is a sign of weakness. It’s refusing to allow the legislative positions of each party rise and fall on their merits. Instead, we have elaborately staged charades where the opposition parties pretend to vote for or against legislation, mostly out of concern for their own reelections. Yes, I understand that the filibuster has been a useful tool to block egregious legislation. But as it presently exists, it’s also badly abused. It’s disappointing that the Senate leadership lacks the political courage to fix this : Before the week is done, one of the longest single “days” in the history of the Senate is expected to finally come to an end. Amid a long-running dispute over decades-old filibuster rules, Senate leaders have used a parliamentary trick to leave the chamber in a state of suspended animation – in reality adjourned since Jan. 5 but officially considered in a long recess that’s part of the same individual legislative day. This nearly three-week break has taken place in large part so leadership could hold private negotiations to consider how to deal with a group of Democrats agitating to shake up the foundation of the world’s most deliberative body, right down to challenging the filibuster. To the dismay of a younger crop of Democrats and some outside liberal activists, there is no chance that rules surrounding the filibuster will be challenged, senior aides on both sides of the aisle say , because party leaders want to protect the right of the Senate’s minority party to sometimes force a supermajority of 60 votes to approve legislation. Instead, rank-and-file lawmakers will receive pitches from Sens. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.), who have been negotiating more limited changes, such as with “secret holds” that allow an anonymous senator to slow legislation. In addition, some modifications could be made to the way confirmations are handled for agency nominees who do not have direct roles in policymaking.
Continue reading …Although the Washington Post had no mention on Monday of the annual March for Life rally in Washington D.C., the paper still found time to devote 48 paragraphs and 2850 words to profiling Ron Reagan and his controversial claim in a new book that his father had symptoms of Alzheimer's while in the White House. Staff writer Manuel Roig-Franzia made sure to highlight in the fifth paragraph, ” The son, now 52, can't muster enthusiasm for present-day Reagan worship, either. He disdains the communal gushing and deifying, 'the fetishistic veneration,' while nurturing a private, though complicated, affection. ” [Emphasis added.] The journalist added, “Ron's mother, Nancy Reagan, is always after him to attend this or that commemoration or unveiling. He always has the same reaction: 'Oh, no. Not another aircraft carrier. Not another bridge. Not another highway!'” However, Roig-Franzia waited until paragraph 30 to note, “[Ron Reagan] worked as a television political commentator and radio host, but his show on Air America, on which he tended toward liberal flame-throwing, ended a year ago amid the talk radio network's bankruptcy.” The article concluded with a gratuitous shot at brother Michael Reagan, hinting that he's just attempting to cash in on the legacy of the 40 th President: Michael is also coming out with a new book timed to the centennial: “The New Reagan Revolution: How Ronald Reagan's Principles Can Restore America's Greatness.” Among Michael's many Reagan-related enterprises is a company that sells e-mail addresses with the host name @Reagan.com for as much as $39 a year; the proceeds support conservative causes. He says he's sold between 4,000 and 5,000. Ron has no such projects planned. He'll promote his book, then – well – who knows? “I'm still asking myself the question,” he says, “about what I want to be when I grow up.” Roig Franzia did include critics of Ron Reagan's assertion that his father displayed symptoms of Alzheimer's while President: “Reaganites and Reagan watchers are reacting with varying levels of disbelief and rage. Edmund Morris, the biographer, says in an interview that he doubts the claim in part because Reagan's daily diaries are as “clearly expressed and well-written” at the end of his presidency as at the beginning.” However, Michael Reagan might not want to hold his breath waiting for his 2850 word, 48 paragraph profile. Over a span of five days and three programs, ABC touted Ron Reagan's book for 24 minutes . — Scott Whitlock is a news analyst for the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter .
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Oh my… George Will doesn’t think Supreme Court Justices should be attending the State of the Union address because it’s just going to be a “pep rally” where they might get their “erogenous zone” stroked. Somehow I doubt he has the same concerns about them attending Koch Brothers’ retreats . AMANPOUR: That was President Obama delivering last year’s State of the Union address. Welcome back. Joined again by our roundtable. George, I know that you have a great, great regard for watching the State of the Union on television. WILL: A, they’re overrated. The next morning, the country is still a complex continental country with muscular interests and politics is its own momentum. Between Jefferson and Woodrow Wilson, no one delivered this in person. They sent their report to Congress in writing. But now we’ve turned this into this panorama in which — in an interminable speech, every president, regardless of party, tries to stroke every erogenous zone in electorate. AMANPOUR: Oh, my goodness. WILL: And it becomes a political pep rally, to use the phrase of Chief Justice Roberts last year. If it’s going to be a pep rally, with the president’s supporters or whatever party standing up and braying approval, and histrionic pouting on the part of the other, then it’s no place for the judiciary, it’s no place for the uniformed military, and it’s no place for non-adolescent legislators.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Movement conservatives seem to believe that they’ve won the narrative after the tragic shootings in Tucson — namely, that Jared Lee Loughner was just a nutcase and there was nothing political about his attack on a Democratic congresswoman. Indeed, they seem to believe that it’s now conventional wisdom that whenever an angry right-wing nut violently attacks an oft-demonized liberal target, it has nothing, nothing whatsoever to do with the demonizing rhetoric that preceded it. Just another “isolated incident.” Even if we ARE up to 20 and counting. The problem with this “wisdom”? Reality has a nasty way of intruding, as David at VC noted yesterday , from a New York Times report about how Beck’s obsession with Frances Fox Piven has now produced death threats against her : Never mind that Ms. Piven’s radical plan to help poor people was published 45 years ago, when Mr. Beck was a toddler. Anonymous visitors to his Web site have called for her death, and some, she said, have contacted her directly via e-mail. In response, a liberal nonprofit group, the Center for Constitutional Rights, wrote to the chairman of Fox News, Roger Ailes, on Thursday to ask him to put a stop to Mr. Beck’s “false accusations” about Ms. Piven. “Mr. Beck is putting Professor Piven in actual physical danger of a violent response,” the group wrote. Fox News disagrees. Joel Cheatwood, a senior vice president, said Friday that Mr. Beck would not be ordered to stop talking about Ms. Piven on television. He said Mr. Beck had quoted her accurately and had never threatened her. “ ‘The Glenn Beck Program,’ probably above and beyond any on television, has denounced violence repeatedly,” Mr. Cheatwood said. Not as often, however, as it has denounced Frances Fox Piven. We’ve given some ripe examples in the video above, but really, it pales in comparison to a more complete list, such as this account from Media Matters . We’ve already seen what happens when Fox hosts hold individual people up for extreme demonization. When Bill O’Reilly called Dr. George Tiller a “Baby Killer” some 28 times, it was no surprise when a kook already worked up by an environment of hateful rhetoric walked into a church and shot Tiller in the head. And when O’Reilly more recently attacked Rep. Jim McDermott, a right-wing nutcase from California called McDermott up and issued a long string of obscene death threats. Glenn Beck is a particular case. When a Beck fan named Charles Wilson was inspired to call and threaten Sen. Patty Murray, we heard nothing from Fox News. Likewise, when it became clear that would-be Tides Foundation terrorist Byron Williams was directly inspired by Beck as well, not a word was heard. Now, having been directly confronted over the threats to Piven, this supposed news network is actually trying to stonewall its way past reality. So far, we’ve been lucky that no one outside of two injured Oakland police officers has been physically injured by the nutcases Beck inspires. But death threats are a real injury too. Which raises the question: Is Fox waiting until someone actually physically attacks Frances Fox Piven before convincing Beck to reel it in? Indeed, judging from the vociferous insistence that its ugly rhetoric and that of other right-wingers had nothing, nothing to do with the Giffords shooting, I think it’s safe to predict that if someone in fact does harm Ms. Piven, they’ll adamantly deny they had anything to do with it. They won’t be able to run and hide as they have from the Williams case. Especially considering the reality of the extraordinary level of threats being leveled in Pivens’ direction — including at Beck’s own website. As we reported last week, these threats remained up at Beck’s site for the better part of two weeks: enlarge enlarge enlarge Some have since been removed. Some remain, as do some others with threatening overtones. Frances Fox Piven herself was on with Amy Goodman the other night , and had to express her own bewilderment at the bizarre way that Beck is depicting and smearing her, as well as her work: As I explained at The Investigative Fund, this kind of extreme demonization is profoundly irresponsible — especially when it reaches the level where actual death threats are being drummed up and the news organization associated with them is refusing to accept any accountability for it: The critical components that distinguish irresponsible speech from responsible speech are interworking and interdependent, but they involve standards that are universally recognized by journalists as fundamental to their profession: truthfulness, accuracy, and fairness. Thus irresponsible speech usually has five features: * It is factually false, or so grossly distorted and misleading as to constitute functional falsity. * It holds certain targeted individuals or groups of people up for vilification and demonization. * It smears them with false or misleading information that depicts them in a degraded light. * It depicts them as either emblematic, or the actual source, of a significant problem or a major threat. * It leads its audience to conclude that the solution to the problem manifested by these people is their elimination. In the Goldmark case, the Duck Club members not only demonized the Goldmarks, but they told Rice things that were simply not true — though the tellers wished ardently that they were true, they were purely concoctions of their fevered imaginations. This is the case with so much far-right wingnuttery — the “Birther” conspiracy theories, the FEMA-camp claims, the “constitutionalist” theories about taxation and the Federal Reserve, the belief that President Obama is out to take away their guns, to list just a few examples — and yet people believe them anyway. Mainly because major-media figures and leading right-wing politicians have assured them that they are true. This rhetoric acts as a kind of wedge between the people who absorb it and the real world. A cognitive dissonance arises from believing things that are provably untrue, and people who fanatically cling to beliefs that do not comport with reality find themselves increasingly willing to buy into other similarly unhinged beliefs. For those who are already unhinged, the effects are particularly toxic. All of these paranoid theories, you’ll observe, serve the explicit purpose of creating scapegoats. A number of them have taken hold in the mainstream public discourse because they have been presented seriously for discussion by various right-wing talking heads, most notably Glenn Beck and Lou Dobbs, with full-throated support from Rush Limbaugh, Bill O’Reilly, Michael Savage, Sean Hannity, Michelle Malkin, and Sarah Palin. You have to wonder how long the rest of the journalism profession is going to let them get away with it. Enough is enough.
Continue reading …Here’s an interesting article about how Comcast wooed Mignon Clyburn, daughter of powerful Congressman Jim Clyburn, to get that all-important final vote for their merger with NBC. Comcast really needed her vote, and knew it. That’s because the two pro-business Republican commissioners, Robert M. McDowell and Meredith Attwell Baker, would likely vote for the merger. And so would Julius Genachowski, the Democratic chairman of the FCC. But a 3-2 vote, with Clyburn and the fifth FCC commissioner, Democrat Michael J. Copps, voting “no,” would not display bipartisan support and would be politically awkward for Genachowski. Comcast bosses, say industry sources, made this parsing early, and began to court Clyburn. One issue important to her was diversity. Months before a final vote, Comcast reached agreements with Asian, Hispanic, and African American civil rights groups, agreeing to create high-level diversity councils at the company, add a Hispanic director on the Comcast board, and expand minority hiring. Comcast did not stop there. It agreed it would add cable channels either owned by minorities or that targeted minority audiences, to its cable system, with 23 million subscribers. In the final days of the review, Comcast conceded to a last-minute request by Clyburn to add protections for small cable operators that said Comcast would force them to pay high programming costs for NBCU content . The wooing paid off. The final FCC vote was 4-1, with only Copps – steadfastly opposed all along – saying no. Clyburn said in a statement Friday that she initially viewed the Comcast-NBCU transaction “with some skepticism.” “But after countless hours of review, I concluded that the companies went a long way toward addressing each and every one of my concerns,” Clyburn said. She said she was convinced “that Comcast was sincere about ensuring that this merger would be in the public interest.” Progressives were concerned about her appointment to the commission ; she had a less-than-impressive resume, and her father had an anti-net neutrality track record. The telecoms, on the other hand, were thrilled, with one praising her “insightful and pragmatic perspective.” As it turned out, she did side with at least the concept of net neutrality, voting for the watered-down rules approved in December.
Continue reading …The liberal actor that has in the past railed against the Bush tax cuts is apparently being targeted by New York City for trying to evade taxation. Try to not giggle as you read this report about Alec Baldwin from the New York Daily News: Actor Alec Baldwin
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