On Monday's Newsroom, CNN treated Arizona's gun laws as a significant contributor to the shootings in Tucson. Correspondent Jessica Yellin prompted the local prosecutor to spout her pro-gun control views. Anchor Brooke Baldwin highlighted a local Republican's gun-toting ad and the infamous clip of an anti-Obama protester carrying a semi-automatic rifle outside a 2009 presidential event in Arizona. read more
Continue reading …Ralph Reed came out over the weekend with his defense of Tom DeLay . It comes to this: He was only trying to elect Republicans. Is that a crime? Evidently a jury thought so. Mr. Morally Superior “Christians-for-Hire” Reed says DeLay is a victim of political vendettas and inconsistent laws. He forgets that whether or not they “did it all the time”, it was illegal in Texas to accept corporate contributions for state campaigns. That’s all. But here’s his defense. You be the jury: I was chairman of the Georgia Republican party in 2002, so I know first-hand that the practice of exchanging soft and hard dollars was both commonplace and legal at the time; it was practiced openly by both parties. Indeed, a commodity-like national market of corporate and personal funds operated among state and national party committees, with soft money traded for hard money (which was harder to raise and therefore more valuable) at between 50 and 75 cents on the dollar. If DeLay’s operatives made any mistake at all, it was being too good at negotiating: They exchanged the funds dollar-for-dollar.This even exchange enabled prosecutors to later claim the funds were “laundered.” But money laundering requires an underlying crime. There was nothing illegal about supporting state House candidates with the funds so exchanged, and the transaction was reported publicly by both DeLay’s state committee and the RNC. It takes some real balls to write something like this about a time where Reed was actively selling out the Christian Coalition to Jack Abramoff for kickbacks which were laundered through non-profits. If there were even a little bit of fairness in the world, Ralph Reed would be serving a tougher sentence than Abramoff instead of painting himself as the hero of moral conservatives and champion of the likes of Tom DeLay.
Continue reading …The photo shows Ed Schultz literally pointing the finger at Fox News.
Continue reading …Republican candidate Joe Buck debates Democratic candidate Michael Bennet on Social Security, October 2010. Let the wild speculation and finger pointing begin : Federal authorities have arrested a man accused of repeatedly making threats to Colorado U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet’s staff. The most recent threats allegedly came on Thursday, two days before a gunman in Arizona killed six people and wounded 14 others, including a congresswoman. According to an arrest warrant affidavit, John Troy Davis called Bennet’s Denver office Thursday upset over his social security benefits and during the call said he, “may go to terrorism.” He also allegedly said, “To get your attention, I will go down there and set fire to the perimeter,” according to the affidavit. During a call several days earlier, Davis, who lives in the metro area, told another Bennet staffer, “I’m just going to come down there and shoot you all,” while complaining about social security benefits , according to the affidavit. “Davis is well-known to the Senator’s office as he has called frequently to complain about such benefits,” the affidavit states. During one call, according to the affidavit, Davis told a staffer, “I’m a schizophrenic and I need help.” Bennet’s staff had previously set up a hearing regarding Davis’s Social Security benefits, but Davis did not attend, according to the affidavit. Let me just say again that the particulars of Davis’ voter registration card is less important than the lack of access to mental health resources and apparent ready access to guns. This is a man who begged for help, and although Bennet did what he could do (according to this article), perhaps if we as a country valued mental health resources more than tax cuts for millionaire and billionaires, we’d see less of these kinds of incidents.
Continue reading …Every now and then, the staged ladies’ coffee klatch known as “The View” produces some useful commentary on Our Life and Times, and in this instance, taken from a show that aired last year, the discussion seems downright prescient … Related Entries January 9, 2011 Gabrielle Giffords: Tragic Prophet December 30, 2010 Murkowski Clears Last Hurdle to Senate Seat
Continue reading …Click here to view this media It’s fundamental to their psychology, as Digby often observes , for right-wingers to constantly portray themselves as victims — indeed, the American Right long ago mastered the art of flipping reality on its head and turning attempts to hold them accountable for their predilection for violence into a vicious and unfair attack on their honor — of turning the perpetrators into victims and the victims into perpetrators. In 1870, it was the “bloody shirt”. Today, in the wake of the Gabrielle Giffords shooting, it’s the “blood libel,” as Glenn Reynolds puts it. Indeed, the only thing more predictable than the eventuality of actual violence erupting in a climate of broadly sanctioned violent eliminationist rhetoric is the certainty that the Right will attempt to claim that any discussion of accountability and the need to examine the role our national discourse has in fomenting violence is an attempt to victimize them. See, for instance, Tea Party Express spokesman Sal Russo this morning on Fox, attempting to claim that Jared Loughner was actually a “far left loon” (sorry, Sal, but that just won’t fly ). Meanwhile, Michelle Malkin is trying to counter by claiming that it’s actually folks on the Left who’ve been purveying the ugliest rhetoric. Predictably, there are the usual suspects among the “concerned liberal” segment likewise wringing their hands that we shouldn’t jump to conclusions (see especially Jon Chait at “even the liberal” New Republic, and Jack Shafer at Slate ). The bottom line for all of them is that this is just another “isolated incident” because Jared Loughner is just “a lone nut”. Once again, we call that a complete cop-out. Sure, there are lots of complicating factors, especially Loughner’s pretty clearly deranged mental state. But there are also some factors that are simply undeniable, in particular that Giffords was shot in a climate of extraordinarily heated and hateful rhetoric , including the casual associations of guns and targets with Giffords personally. Moreover, what’s equally undeniable is that it comes amid a gradually mounting litany of violence directed against “liberal” and government targets, effectively suggesting a fresh onset of domestic terrorism from the extremist American Right . Just in the past two and a half years, here’s the record of “isolated incidents” amassed so far: — July 2008 : A gunman named Jim David Adkisson, agitated at how “liberals” are “destroying America,” walks into a Unitarian Church and opens fire, killing two churchgoers and wounding four others. — October 2008 : Two neo-Nazis are arrested in Tennessee in a plot to murder dozens of African-Americans, culminating in the assassination of President Obama. — December 2008 : A pair of “Patriot” movement radicals — the father-son team of Bruce and Joshua Turnidge, who wanted “to attack the political infrastructure” — threaten a bank in Woodburn, Oregon, with a bomb in the hopes of extorting money that would end their financial difficulties, for which they blamed the government. Instead, the bomb goes off and kills two police officers . The men eventually are convicted and sentenced to death for the crime . — December 2008 : In Belfast, Maine, police discover the makings of a nuclear “dirty bomb” in the basement of a white supremacist shot dead by his wife. The man, who was independently wealthy, reportedly was agitated about the election of President Obama and was crafting a plan to set off the bomb. — January 2009 : A white supremacist named Keith Luke embarks on a killing rampage in Brockton, Mass., raping and wounding a black woman and killing her sister, then killing a homeless man before being captured by police as he is en route to a Jewish community center. — February 2009 : A Marine named Kody Brittingham is arrested and charged with plotting to assassinate President Obama. Brittingham also collected white-supremacist material. — April 2009 : A white supremacist named Richard Poplawski opens fire on three Pittsburgh police officers who come to his house on a domestic-violence call and kills all three, because he believed President Obama intended to take away the guns of white citizens like himself. Poplawski is currently awaiting trial. — April 2009 : Another gunman in Okaloosa County, Florida, similarly fearful of Obama’s purported gun-grabbing plans, kills two deputies when they come to arrest him in a domestic-violence matter, then is killed himself in a shootout with police. — May 2009 : A “sovereign citizen” named Scott Roeder walks into a church in Wichita, Kansas, and assassinates abortion provider Dr. George Tiller. — June 2009 : A Holocaust denier and right-wing tax protester named James Von Brunn opens fire at the Holocaust Museum, killing a security guard. — February 2010 : An angry tax protester named Joseph Ray Stack flies an airplane into the building housing IRS offices in Austin, Texas. (Media are reluctant to label this one “domestic terrorism” too. ) — March 2010 : Seven militiamen from the Hutaree Militia in Michigan and Ohio are arrested and charged with plotting to assassinate local police officers with the intent of sparking a new civil war. — March 2010 : An anti-government extremist named John Patrick Bedell walks into the Pentagon and opens fire, wounding two officers before he is himself shot dead. — May 2010 : A “sovereign citizen” from Georgia is arrested in Tennessee and charged with plotting the violent takeover of a local county courthouse. — May 2010 : A still-unidentified white man walks into a Jacksonville, Fla., mosque and sets it afire, simultaneously setting off a pipe bomb. — May 2010 : Two “sovereign citizens” named Jerry and Joe Kane gun down two police officers who pull them over for a traffic violation, and then wound two more officers in a shootout in which both of them are eventually killed. — July 2010 : An agitated right-winger and convict named Byron Williams loads up on weapons and drives to the Bay Area intent on attacking the offices of the Tides Foundation and the ACLU, but is intercepted by state patrolmen and engages them in a shootout and armed standoff in which two officers and Williams are wounded. — September 2010 : A Concord, N.C., man is arrested and charged with plotting to blow up a North Carolina abortion clinic. The man, 26-year–old Justin Carl Moose, referred to himself as the “Christian counterpart to (Osama) bin Laden” in a taped undercover meeting with a federal informant. The Giffords shooting brings the tally to 19 total cases of domestic-terrorism inspired by right-wing extremism in the past couple of years. Oh, excuse me: I meant to say “isolated incidents”. Because that is how each of these cases was treated — and how they continue to be reported by the mainstream media, particularly at Fox, which generally does not report on them at all. We’d like to ask Glenn Reynolds and Michelle Malkin : Exactly how many left-wingers can you find out there who walk into churches, museums and political rallies and shoot people in the head? When you can name any, then maybe we can talk about how ugly the Left is getting. Until then, all the focus is going to be on the angry people creating a climate in which extremist, unhinging right-wing rhetoric is widely broadcast and officially condoned by supposedly “mainstream” conservatives — at the very top of the food chain, and through the Right’s prominent mass-media organs. That, frankly, is as it should be. Because the toll is mounting.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media CNN’s Howard Kurtz and the San Francisco Chronicle’s Debra Saunders did their best to give cover to Sarah Palin for her crosshairs map targeting Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. It’s pretty bad when even Politico hack Roger Simon has had enough of your nonsense. As he rightfully pointed out, Palin doesn’t have to be directly responsible for what happened with this shooting to have a conversation about the violent political rhetoric coming from her and the rest of the right wing noise machine in America and the fact that it needs to stop. Edit: A tweet by Howard Kurtz on Saturday. enlarge KURTZ: You just saw that montage, Roger Simon, and you can’t make a worse mistake than that, to declare a member of Congress dead. And I find it disappointing, because we’ve been through so many stores like that, where fragmentary information turns out to be wrong. SIMON: Well, you’re always going to get certain things wrong on these stories. The number of dead always climbs and shrinks, and climbs again. I remember as a young school kid hearing that Vice President Johnson had been shot and President Kennedy had been wounded. That got flipped around. The fact is, we go with what we hear. That’s often wrong. KURTZ: But why not wait? Look, we understand it’s happening, you’re seeing sort of news gathering in its roughest and rawest form. Why not wait until it’s confirmed. If she was dead, we would have found out 20 minutes later. KURTZ: And on that point, Debra Saunders, a couple of hours after this tragic shooting, even as we weren’t sure who was alive and who was dead, I Googled “Gabrielle Giffords” and “Sarah Palin.” And lots of stories and blog posts came up talking about Sarah Palin, 10 months ago, putting up a map of the Democrats she wanted defeated, and using crosshairs, gun sites, to represent those targets, and, of course, she used the rhetoric about “Don’t retreat, reload.” And in a way that I found to be — you know, first of all, I guess how about a decent interval? The victims were still being rushed to surgery. But I also felt like, was it fair to bring her into something that she had nothing to do with? SAUNDERS: Well, it was ideological opportunism. I mean, it’s very human, when something like this happens, you want the villain to be the person you hate. And so a lot of people rushed to do that. You know, I’ve got to tell you, I’m a conservative. When I heard this story, my first thought was, oh, no, it’s a right-wing nut with a gun. And I think that these stories about the Tea Party being a ticking time bomb are crap. I find them offensive, but we know that there are extremists. KURTZ: But you said, oh, no, it’s a right-wing nut with a gun, because you feared that then anybody on the right would, by implication, be blamed for this shooting? SAUNDERS: No. Because I feared it was true. I mean, that was my first thought. KURTZ: And let’s say it was true. Let’s say it was true. SAUNDERS: But you know, that’s not our job. KURTZ: Hold on. Let’s say it was a right-wing nut with a gun. It does seem to have been a nut, a guy — a 22-year-old kid whose political ramblings are utterly incoherent. But so why should anyone else be blamed if it was a right-wing nut? Which is was not, by the way. SAUNDERS: No, it wasn’t. And I guess — I mean, we know that there are extremists and we know that parties have to deal with the extremists on their side. But I also, of course — I mean, as somebody in the business — and let’s — six people are dead. This is an awful tragedy. A little girl who just got on the student council shot. So this is just — this is not a political event. KURTZ: It’s awful. SAUNDERS: Let’s get that — it’s just horrible. But I also — as an opinion person, I could just see myself getting sucked into this thing where a bunch of people — and there were some people. There were people in the media with no impulse control. People like Keith Olbermann and Paul Krugman, who just, boom, started hitting Sarah Palin and, boom, started hitting the right before the facts were in. You know, it’s our job to first — it’s not our job to give our first impulses, because they are often wrong. KURTZ: They’re often wrong. Let me get — SAUNDERS: It’s our job to get the facts. SIMON: Let me give you my second and third impulse then. KURTZ: OK. SIMON: I’m not ready to surrender the point that what Sarah Palin did by putting crosshairs over congressional districts was a good and innocent thing to do. KURTZ: No, it was a dumb thing to do. SIMON: More than dumb. KURTZ: OK. SIMON: More than dumb. (CROSSTALK) SIMON: In fact, Representative Giffords complained at the time that these ads went up. KURTZ: Right. We have that tape. SIMON: Because they were bad things to do, and that they degraded the political culture in America. KURTZ: OK. PAGE: Well, I think for one thing, as Roger mentioned, this is not a new issue. This — ever since Sarah Palin first posted those pictures with the crosshairs, there were complaints about them. And right now I think if the situation were politically reversed, if a liberal was using this kind of rhetoric about a conservative, rest assured, you would hear from the conservative camp complaints. KURTZ: But that would be just as wrong. PAGE: That said, I’m not going to jump to conclusions about any particular incident like this one as to what motivated this young man. He obviously does show signs of being unhinged. And it’s a little too easy to ascribe political motive to that. KURTZ: It’s a little to easy. But Roger, you disagree. PAGE: At the same time though, the atmosphere has gotten too volatile. The rhetoric has gotten too volatile. We need to tone it down. SIMON: With all respect, Clarence — and you know I respect you — what is too easy to do is to ignore the Sarah Palin ads and say we can’t know that these ads caused the killing. Absolutely true. We can’t know it, we’ll never know it. SAUNDERS: No, no, no. Do not do this. Do not — SIMON: But then say, therefore, such ads do not require our criticism, do not require us to speak out against them, when this wasn’t called for. KURTZ: At the time, yes, but it’s 10 months later. Debra, let me get you in here because you obviously feel strongly. SAUNDERS: Yes. Don’t cheapen this whole thing. Don’t do this yet. We don’t know. Let’s just — this is a horrible, horrible tragedy, outrage, awful thing. You know, what Sarah Palin did, the target stuff, Howie, you wrote about this. It’s something campaigns do. It’s sort of like an act of guilt, that she erased it. But, you know, this isn’t about Sarah Palin. This is about these six people. This is about a congresswoman who goes out and tries to talk to her constituents and is killed — I’m sorry — I made the mistake — is shot. And don’t cheapen this by trying to make it what you want it to be ideologically. Maybe we’ll find out that’s the case later, but this is just not the time for it. It’s wrong, and you shouldn’t do that, Roger. SIMON: This isn’t about cheapening the deaths of those unfortunate people and the woundings of the others. This is about whether we collectively, as the news media, who has a big bullhorn, speak out against the use of such images of targets on people’s faces. They didn’t use faces, they used congressional districts. You can’t tell me we should say, oh, I’m not going to complain about that because it cheapens the death of those children. It doesn’t cheapen it. It gives it meaning of some kind. SAUNDERS: It has nothing to do with it. But, Roger, it has nothing to do with it as far as we know. If we find out something later, fine. But we don’t know that there is any nexus. KURTZ: We will continue this debate in a couple of moments. Transcript via Lexis Nexis .
Continue reading …Despite drumming up support in the form of testimony from former House Speaker Dennis Hastert and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, onetime U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay and his legal team have failed to ward off a jail sentence for money laundering charges. On Monday, DeLay was slapped with a three-year prison sentence in an Austin, Texas, courtroom—but it could have been a lot worse.
Continue reading …The Christian Science Monitor took a brief survey Monday of the coverage of the Gabrielle Giffords shooting from across the Atlantic, browsing British, French, German and Dutch publications to see how the violence and its aftermath registered from their points of view. The Christian Science Monitor: Much of the German editorial position on Giffords was strongly accusatory of the political climate in the US in recent years. The conservative Die Welt stated today that: “This murderous attack came from an atmosphere of discord and self-doubt, because America is experiencing the limits of its power on a daily basis, whether it be on distant fronts or with dissatisfaction at home. It has never been like this. There always was the motto: ‘Yes, we can.’ Today, widespread pessimism prevails, because of the financial crisis, and because of Iraq and Afghanistan, lost battles …” Read more Related Entries November 24, 2010 DeLay Found Guilty in Money Laundering Case November 11, 2010 Dishonoring Pat Tillman
Continue reading …enlarge Newt Gingrich with Wife No. 2 in a series. Collect the whole set! By God, there’s two brand names we can trust! Grover “Date Rape” Norquist and Newt “Serial Adulterer” Gingrich, together again… You’ll notice they’re not talking about replacing those pensions with anything else, nor are they expressing even the mildest concern about what happens to the retirees who need that money. Because, after all, the real benefit of this “helpful” legislation will be to break public employees union s, who somehow persist in voting for Democrats. Another day, another act of organized theft against ordinary working people. This is what we can expect from today’s corporate parties , where regular people are so far down on the list of concerns, it’s hardly worth mentioning: Former House Speaker and possible GOP presidential contender Newt Gingrich is pushing for federal legislation giving financially strapped states the right to file for bankruptcy and renege on pension and other benefit promises made to state employees. Proponents of the measure — which include Americans for Tax Reform, a Washington lobby group that fights tax increases — said the legislation is desperately needed to clear the way for struggling states to slash costs before they go belly up, and should be regarded as a preemptive move that could preclude the need for massive federal bailouts. “It’s in the short-term and long-term interests of government workers and taxpayers to start those reforms now , rather than having to pick up the pieces after a crash landing,” ATR President Grover Norquist said in an interview. “We are working with people inside and outside of Congress on this issue,” said Joe DeSantis, a spokesman for Mr. Gingrich, whom Mr. DeSantis said is considering a bid to be the Republican presidential candidate in 2012. Yep, Joe. I’ll just bet you are — working with people outside Congress, I mean. All kinds of people!
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