Click here to view this media Thank you Harry Reid! It’s about time I heard a Democrat start to push back against the rhetoric we’ve been hearing on Social Security. David Gregory tried to get Reid to say that we need to go after Social Security to solve our “debt problem” (the one they only started caring about after a Democrat got elected as president) and Reid held firm that the program is not in crisis and is going to be solvent for years to come. Frankly I’d like to see them leave that percentage right where it is now and take the cap off of the terribly regressive tax, but I would imagine it will be a cold day in hell before we see the politicians allow that to happen. DAVID GREGORY: What about the role of government, however? Under President Obama the federal debt has expanded by 32 percent. Are people rightfully concerned about the role of government under this President, under Democratic leadership? HARRY REID: People are concerned about the debt, as they should be. But let’s just go back a little bit and look at history. It’s not as if we Democrats don’t know how to run government. Bill Clinton had a program called PAYGO. If you’re gonna have a new program, pay for it; either by increasing revenue or cutting other programs. We did that, and as a result of that we were paying down the debt. And during the eight years of Bush, the first thing they did is get rid of the PAYGO rules. And we have them now reestablished. And we– this last Congress, 111th Congress and President Obama, found ourselves in a hole so deep, you couldn’t see the top of it. And we’re working out way out of that hole. DAVID GREGORY: Social Security– how does it have to change? What they put on the agenda is raising the retirement age, maybe means testing benefits. Is it time for Social Security to fundamentally change if you’re gonna deal with the debt problem? HARRY REID: One of the things that always troubles me is when we start talking about the debt, the first thing people do is run to Social Security. Social Security is a program that works. And it’s going to be– it’s fully funded for the next forty years. Stop picking on Social Security. There’re a lotta places– DAVID GREGORY: Senator are you really saying — HARRY REID: –where you can go to save money. DAVID GREGORY:– the arithmetic on Social Security works? HARRY REID: I’m saying the arithmetic in Social Security works. I have no doubt it does. DAVID GREGORY: It’s not in crisis? HARRY REID: The ne– no, it’s not in crisis. This is– this is– this is something that’s perpetuated by people who don’t like government. Social Security is fine. Are there things we can do to improve Social Security? Of course. DAVID GREGORY: Means testing. Raising the — DAVID GREGORY:–retirement age– HARRY REID: –don’t– DAVID GREGORY: –do you– HARRY REID: –I’m– DAVID GREGORY: –agree with either of those? HARRY REID: –I’m not going to go to with any of those backdoor methods- you know, to whack Social Security recipients. I’m not going to do that. We have a lot of things we can do with– this debt. It’s a problem. But one of the places where I’m not going to be part of picking on is Social Security.
Continue reading …Leave it up to the Chicago Sun Times editorial page to take opportunistic privileges with the Arizona Shooting tragedy and post a shamefully rambling and incoherent smear against the right . With the claim that “we cannot walk away from this one” the newspaper rails against the tone of America’s political rhetoric, to end the fear-mongering and “ quit the demonizing ”. And then in an incredibly inane example of ideological laziness the editorial demonizes “the right” for the tragic shooting. read more
Continue reading …Every bullet, head-stomp, and crosshair-map is another gift. Let media rationalize with false equivalencies while they may, for a new era of nonviolent activism and resistance beckons. Exposing the reactionaries of our time will require courage, commitment, and unwavering devotion to the truth. During 2010, I documented a series of progressive actions that leave me convinced this is more than possible, that in fact a historical cycle is emerging and points the way forward through the tide of tea. Much more after a video and the jump… For me, the nadir of American political discourse came in April as I watched the Tea Party Express perform underneath a full-scale mock-up of the Space Shuttle. Mark Williams, who would later resign from TPE in disgrace after posting a racist ‘letter’ from former slaves to Abraham Lincoln at his website, proclaimed the tea party “a human rights movement.” Speakers repeated the ridiculous claim that two million people had attended the September 12, 2009 tea party in Washington, DC. Focusing the crowd on midterm elections, presenters called on them to “flip this house;” then Victoria Jackson came onstage for a ukulele-driven clown show. All of this was punctuated by calls to sign petitions against Obamacare. Coming on the heels of a season in which progressive action had lagged behind, caught flat-footed by gun-toting tea party organizing, it was a surreal and dispiriting experience. I recognized the lineage of what I was seeing: Cleon Skousen’s 5000-Year Leap shared a table with Williams’ book, which was drawn from his years as a hate radio talker . The signs — ranging from a John Galt references to pious jingoism to outright paranoid fantasia — had the familiar density and incoherence of anti-busing rallies in the 1970s. Those rallies also featured tricorner hats. But the most telling presence that day was the National Rifle Association booth. The gun-bearing demonstrators at town halls in the summer of 2009 confirmed this movement as an armed resistance; an explosion of eliminationist rhetoric from politicians and activists inflamed the reactionary mob. The shooting in Arizona yesterday that killed John Roll, Arizona’s chief federal judge, and wounded Representative Gabrielle Giffords was probably inevitable in an environment where Rand Paul and Allen West pay no price for violence and intimidation by their supporters. Something did start to change last year, however. The month of May saw spontaneous protests against BP, with worldwide attention to coordinated actions in June that took place in dozens of American cities. Curious to see progressive organizing in action after attending so many tea party events, I attended the BP protest in Birmingham and was not disappointed. The temperature was 95 degrees Fahrenheit — a sticky, Alabama heat that did not discourage the diverse attendees. It was very different from the tea party rallies I had covered. The signs all bore correct spelling; everyone talked about real problems instead of imaginary ones. While the people who spoke into my camera were not afraid to call the president to task, they saw BP, and not just a president or a government, as power to be confronted. While tea parties make a great noise about freedom and individual liberty, what I had seen under the Space Shuttle was the worship of power. Glenn Beck’s rally on the mall last year is another example: by extolling the monuments around him with pious reverence, Beck spoke to an audience for whom religion and politics are decidedly not separate. How much the better, then, that ‘social justice’ Christianity is so common at progressive events — for example, all the crosses in hand at September’s Appalachia Rising ( covered here ). Witnessing an act of mass civil disobedience for the first time, it dawned on me that I had never seen or even heard of a tea party that ended in arrests. Appalachia Rising, on the other hand, was led by some of the most courageous people one could ever hope to meet. Mountaintop removal activists are subject to threats, intimidation, and even violence by coal’s powerful defenders. Don Blankenship amped their rage in 2009 with the “Friends of America” rally headlined by Ted Nugent, perhaps the most easily-identified gun enthusiast on the planet. Activists who get arrested in West Virginia can see six-figure bail while those who assault them are ordered into anger management. Call Bob Kincaid some night and ask him whether Judy Bonds, who died last week, was a profile in courage. At least once in every show he will remind listeners that the people of Coal River Mountain Watch, Bonds’ seminal organization, are the bravest people he knows. November brought another opportunity at the School of the Americas Watch . While attendance was down this year from previous ones, the nation’s longest-running peace action ended in spectacular fashion as only (!) two people attempted to jump the fence into Ft. Benning — and Columbus police arrested twenty-two people, including an RT America news crew, as they left the free speech zone. This resulted in a jailhouse solidarity two hours later. Some two hundred people, mostly young, walked ten blocks to the Muscogee County jail to stand across the street clapping, singing, and banging on a drum until ordered to disperse. After spending the entire day observed and fenced on all sides, they were followed back to the convention center by a helicopter. December saw Veterans For Peace leading an antiwar protest in front of the White House. This time, a crowd of about three hundred people endured a frozen Thermopylae of sorts, assembling in Lafayette Park just as an inch of swirling snow began to fall. One hundred and thirty five of them chose to stand in the arrest zone in a “first stand” against permanent war. Watching Chris Hedges deliver a brilliant oration on the necessity of nonviolent resistance, it occurred to me that all three of these civil disobedience actions had involved poetry . Aside from occasional awkward lyrics, poetry is distinctly absent from tea parties. I still have the faded Red Sox hat that protected my camera from rain and snow; if anyone can find me the Pulitzer prizewinning tea party poet laureate, I will eat it. Courageous, creative nonviolence is already happening. To be sure, it isn’t clear that disparate forces can find common cause: Veterans For Peace recognizes that sixty green jobs cost as much as one soldier’s deployment to Afghanistan. Can they make common cause with unions? Appalachia Rising would like to talk about green jobs, too. But what of the civil rights organizations? It is by no means certain that these groups can coalesce, but I’ve never been more sure of the timing. From this moment forward, every gun incident or assault or imprecation by the tea party makes them look like the bad guy. The iron is hot; progressives ought to strike it. Writing at the New York Times today, Matt Bai falsely equates an unfortunate phrase in one Daily Kos diary to Sarah Palin’s target-map: “the question,” he suggests, “is whether Saturday’s shooting marks the logical end point of such a moment — or rather the beginning of a terrifying new one.” But that is not the question. By returning hate with love, can a new movement change the landscape of American politics — and put the lie to media blather about “both sides”? That’s a far better question, and one to which I hope the answer is yes, we can .
Continue reading …It has become apparent in the last 24 hours that the mainstream media is bent on attributing some level of blame for yesterday's tragic shooting in Tuscon, Arizona to Sarah Palin. The chief piece of evidence for this claim is a map SarahPAC devised that placed crosshairs over a number of congressional districts the group would target during the 2010 election cycle. But if violent metaphors in political rhetoric drive crazy people to violence, than the media had better save some blame for themselves, since political reporting is replete with such language (Howard Kurtz noted that fact in his column today). Here are just a few examples (h/t Rich Noyes): read more
Continue reading …enlarge Especially in light of recent events, we need to see the good things around us. This is an all-too-rare moment of common humanity , but it’s a ray of hope: Egypt’s majority Muslim population stuck to its word Thursday night. What had been a promise of solidarity to the weary Coptic community, was honoured, when thousands of Muslims showed up at Coptic Christmas eve mass services in churches around the country and at candlelight vigils held outside. From the well-known to the unknown, Muslims had offered their bodies as “human shields” for last night’s mass, making a pledge to collectively fight the threat of Islamic militants and towards an Egypt free from sectarian strife. “We either live together, or we die together,” was the sloganeering genius of Mohamed El-Sawy, a Muslim arts tycoon whose cultural centre distributed flyers at churches in Cairo Thursday night, and who has been credited with first floating the “human shield” idea. Among those shields were movie stars Adel Imam and Yousra, popular preacher Amr Khaled, the two sons of President Hosni Mubarak, and thousands of citizens who have said they consider the attack one on Egypt as a whole. “This is not about us and them,” said Dalia Mustafa, a student who attended mass at Virgin Mary Church on Maraashly. “We are one. This was an attack on Egypt as a whole, and I am standing with the Copts because the only way things will change in this country is if we come together.” In the days following the brutal attack on Saints Church in Alexandria, which left 21 dead on New Year’ eve, solidarity between Muslims and Copts has seen an unprecedented peak. Millions of Egyptians changed their Facebook profile pictures to the image of a cross within a crescent – the symbol of an “Egypt for All”. Around the city, banners went up calling for unity, and depicting mosques and churches, crosses and crescents, together as one.
Continue reading …Fifteen decapitated bodies were found strewn outside an Acapulco shopping center Sunday and more six bodies were discovered in a taxicab as a bloody turf war rages in the resort city over control of drug shipment routes. —JCL
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Republicans are off to a rough start after taking control of the House of Representative Wednesday. MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow noted Thursday that the party had only been in power for some 33 hours when they had already made, by her count, at least eight serious missteps. “Their initial pledges to the American people have turned out to be kind of a mess,” she said. As one of their first acts, Republicans decided to read the Constitution on the House floor Thursday, but purposefully left out some of the more embarrassing passages. For example, the three-fifths compromise that counted slaves as part of a person was nullified by the 13th Amendment, and so it wasn’t included in the reading. The 18th Amendment, which imposed prohibition on alcohol, was omitted. In addition, Article 4 Section 4 was accidentally left out of the reading because pages in a three-ring binder “simply stuck together.” In their ” Pledge to America ,” Republicans said they would cut $100 billion from the budget in the first year, but have recently backed away from that number. Homeland Security Committee chair Peter King (R-NY) is looking at cutting $50 billion, and a GOP aide told The Huffington Post’s Howard Fineman that the bottom line is more like $30 billion. While the Democrats were in power, Republicans complained that the open rules process — allowing unlimited amendments and debate — wasn’t used. Politico observed Thursday that “[n]one of the bills that will be brought to the floor this week will be brought under open rules.” Republicans adopted a new rule called cut-as-you-go that requires all legislation that will increase the deficit to be offset with spending cuts. The Congressional Budget Office has said that one of the Republicans’ first initiatives, repealing health care reform, would add $230 billion to the to the national debt over ten years. Party leadership has solved this problem by exempting repeal of health care reform from the rules. The GOP promised that all committee attendance would be publicly posted. They reversed that rule Tuesday. In their Pledge to America, Republicans promised that all bills would be justified with a citation of the Constitution. “The three bills that Republicans plan to introduce this week — one to cut the congressional budget, one to repeal the health care bill and another to instruct House committees to present new health care legislation — were posted on the Rules Committee website with plenty of time for review, but none had the constitutional citation for similar review,” Politico reported . “The Republican Party has wrapped itself in the Constitution at every turn for political purposes,” Maddow continued. “They’ve outdone themselves on this matter.” Two House Republicans skipped out on the swearing-in ceremony on the House floor Wednesday. The Huffington Post reported that Rep. Pete Sessions (R-TX) and Rep. Mike Fitzpatrick (R-PA) decided to attend a fundraiser instead. The two tried to claim they had been properly sworn in because they had raised their hands while watching the swearing in on television. Sessions and Fitzpatrick went on to cast votes in the House. Sessions even presided over the Rules Committee. “Dude, you can’t get sworn in by a TV,” Maddow explained. “You have to be there in person. If you could become a congressman by raising your hand at the TV, everyone simultaneously watching C-SPAN yesterday and reaching for something on a high shelf or waving to a friend would be a congressman right now.” “These are self-inflicted things,” she added. “Republicans carefully laid out these rakes on the floor inside the front door. They’ve been stepping on them one after the other since they got in.”
Continue reading …Jubilant residents of war-torn Southern Sudan lined up outside polling stations on Sunday, the first day of a weeklong referendum on the question of seceding from the northern half of the country. The vote on autonomy has been a long time coming, with the south still suffering from decades of civil war and neglect by the northern government. —JCL Al-Jazeera English: “The turnout was emotional,” Chan Reec Madut, who heads the South Sudan Referendum Bureau, said. “We have never witnessed this kind of turnout before, even during the election,” he said, referring to last April’s presidential, parliamentary and state elections. “There is singing, there is dancing, this is a day like no other in the history of the people of south Sudan.” He said the polling would continue as scheduled on Monday. A total of 3.9 million southerners have registered for the self-determination vote that may lead to the partition of Africa’s largest country. Read more Related Entries January 8, 2011 Arizona Congresswoman Shot (Update 3) January 7, 2011 Mexican Drug War Spills Into Guatemala
Continue reading …Protests over unemployment have led to the deaths of eight people in Tunisia. The government said police opened fire in self-defense after rioters took to destroying public buildings in the northwestern towns of Thala and Kasserine. —JCL The BBC: The deaths occurred in the town of Thala—about 200 km (125 miles) south-west of the capital Tunis—and the nearby town of Kasserine. An interior ministry statement said that in both towns, police had fired in self-defence after rioters attacked public buildings. The protests first erupted last month over a lack of freedom and jobs. Read more Related Entries January 8, 2011 Arizona Congresswoman Shot (Update 3) January 7, 2011 Mexican Drug War Spills Into Guatemala
Continue reading …