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Newstalgia Reference Room – The Johnson Years – 1963-1969

enlarge Lyndon Johnson – somewhat imposing at times. Click here to view this media Since we’re coming to the end of a year and the end of a decade, I thought taking a look at the Presidency of Lyndon Johnson and the turbulent times surrounding it might be a good idea. Here is a look back at the Johnson years, as presented by NBC Radio and their Second Sunday series, broadcast on January 1969, as Richard Nixon assumed the White House. Opinions on Johnson as President were sharply divided as much as everything else in the country at the time. In that respect, there are striking similarities between then and now with very little in the way of “middle-ground” opinions it seems. So in case you were wondering if the country has always been divided over a leader and an administration’s policies. I’m here to tell you it’s always been that way. I guess we just have to get used to it. Happy New Year.

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‘Left, Right & Center’: On American Exceptionalism

This New Year’s Eve special edition of “Left, Right & Center” finds our four show regulars—Arianna Huffington, Robert Scheer, Matt Miller and Tony Blankley—riffing on the topic of American exceptionalism and all its attendant hazards and potential positives. Related Entries December 30, 2010 Pakistani Disappearances: C’mon Guys December 28, 2010 ‘The Comeback Kid’ and the Kids Who Won’t

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By Mr. Fish Related Entries December 31, 2010 Obama’s Two-Year Economic Report Card December 29, 2010 Will Liberals Learn From Adversity?

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Obama’s Two-Year Economic Report Card

By Nomi Prins There are two potential ways to measure the economic performance of a political leader. One is by the profitability, stock prices and executive bonuses of a nation’s corporations. The other is by the financial condition of the majority of its population. Related Entries December 31, 2010 Obama’s Two-Year Economic Report Card December 29, 2010 Will Liberals Learn From Adversity?

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Midday Open Thread: The Best Movies of 2010?

Click here to view this media I’m probably not qualified to talk about the year’s best movies, because — being the father of a 9-year-old — I made it to relatively few of them that did not feature talking animals. However, thanks to the graces of Blu-Ray, I did get my eyes popped out by Inception, one of the best movies I’ve seen in many moons. Now I just need to wait for the discs to come out on the other grown-up films. So, which were your favorites? Speaking of talking animals, one of the best-looking movies I’ve ever seen — both in the 3D version in the theater and the Blu-Ray at home — was Legends of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga’hoole . I know everyone else loved How to Train Your Dragon and Toy Story 3 (justifiably), but for sheer visuals I’ve never quite had my socks knocked off as I did with Ga’Hoole . It lags the other two in writing, though it’s still a strong enough story — but holy cow, this kind of animation is really stunning, and most grown-ups will never see it. For the parents out there … what were your favorite kids’ movies? Click here to view this media

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Right Blames Obama for Bush’s Failure to "Jawbone" OPEC

With U.S. gas prices above the $3 level, the conservative echo chamber is in overdrive. While the Heritage Foundation warns “Obama will make you pay more at the pump” and Americans for Limited Government decries “Obama’s war on energy,” Brent Bozell’s Media Research Center simply asks, “How does Obama plan to raise prices?” Of course, as Paul Krugman pointed out this week, stagnant production and accelerating global demand for oil as the world recovers from the 2008 economic meltdown have much more to do with price increases at the pump. That, and oilman turned President George W. Bush’s utter failure to “jawbone” his friends in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia into opening the spigots. On May 7, 2001, Bush press secretary Ari Fleischer was asked “does the President believe we need to correct our lifestyles to address the energy problem?” Fleischer’s infamous response made clear energy conservation was off the table for President Bush: “That’s a big no. The President believes that it’s an American way of life, and that it should be the goal of policy makers to protect the American way of life.” Instead, George W. Bush promised to get biblical on OPEC. His pledge to persuade, cajole and other twist arms dated back to his first run for the White House in 1999. As oil prices rose to the then-alarming level of $30 that December, then Governor Bush said President Clinton “must jawbone OPEC members to lower prices.” At a New Hampshire Republican debate the next month, Bush claimed the mantle of the Great Persuader. Contending that his days in the West Texas oil fields made him uniquely qualified for the task, Bush proclaimed: “What I think the president ought to do is he ought to get on the phone with the OPEC cartel and say we expect you to open your spigots…And the president of the United States must jawbone OPEC members to lower the price… …I used to be in the oil business. I was little oil — really little oil. And so I understand the — I understand what can happen in the marketplace.” By June 2000 , the Bush jawbone pledge became a standard on the stump. As the New York Times reported, Bush foreshadowed future expenditures of political capital he would fail to accumulate: “I would work with our friends in OPEC to convince them to open up the spigot, to increase the supply,” Mr. Bush, the presumptive Republican candidate for president, told reporters here today. “Use the capital that my administration will earn, with the Kuwaitis or the Saudis, and convince them to open up the spigot.” That November, of course, the American people were persuaded. Despite Bush’s own personal record of busts and bailouts in the business, his family’s close ties to Prince Bandar and the Saudi royal family, Americans must have reasoned, should count for something. As it turned out, not so much. Confusing master and slave in the American-OPEC relationship, Bush failed at every turn to get his Persian Gulf friends to bump up production or slash prices. Other times, of course, he didn’t even try. In the spring of 2004, the White House trumpeted Saudi Prince Bandar’s commitment to maintaining the price of oil in the range of $22 to $28 a barrel. With the price then at $33 a barrel, by April speculation ran rampant that President Bush had secured a deal with the Saudis just in time for the November election . But as a barrel reached then-record levels topping $50, it became clear that both Bush and Bandar were backing off their past pledges. As CBS News reported that September: As gas topped a record level of $50 a barrel this week, Mr. Bush has shown no propensity to personally pressure, or “jawbone,” Mideast oil producers to increase output. A spokesman for the president reportedly said in March that Mr. Bush will not personally lobby oil cartel leaders to change their minds. In the spring of 2005 , President Bush returned to his failed formula on oil prices. Promising to use his self-proclaimed charm to woo the Saudis, Bush would ultimately leave the American people to the mercy of the marketplace. As the AP detailed : In a CNBC interview, Bush said he would press the Saudi crown prince to boost production. “I’ll be talking to our friends about making sure they understand that if they pinch the world economy too much, it’ll affect their ability to sell crude oil in the long run,” Bush said. Jerry Taylor, an energy analyst at the Cato Institute, a Washington-based think tank that advocates less government regulation, said the idea that “jawboning OPEC or arranging for nice relations with OPEC will somehow get us more oil is utter illusion.” An illusion, indeed. As the price of a barrel oil surged into record territory in March, OPEC dismissed out of hand President Bush’s latest use of his jawbone. Pointing to the collapse of the dollar during the Bush presidency and the slumping American economy, OPEC leaders are not budging on production levels or prices: “OPEC is angry that President Bush wants them to increase production while the dollar is sinking and the administration is doing nothing about that,” said Fadel Gheit, an oil analyst at Oppenheimer & Company in New York. “It”s really not surprising that they have ignored him.” Back in Washington, President Bush that April was left to grouse about Congress for a situation he insisted was not his fault. In prepared remarks peppered with accusations of Congressional inaction, Bush opened with a salvo aimed at Capitol Hill. “I’ve repeatedly submitted proposals to help address these problems,” Bush said, “Yet time after time, Congress chose to block them.” Ultimately, a frustrated George W. Bush suggested the energy crisis called for a higher power: “And so I firmly believe that — you know, if there was a magic wand to wave, I’d be waving it, of course.” By early 2008 when a barrel of oil reached $127, President Bush’s impotence in the face of the stratospheric – and uninterrupted – rise in gas prices reached comic proportions. Asked by a reporter on February 28, 2008 about the looming arrival of $4 gas, Bush the former oil man did what comes naturally and played dumb: Q What’s your advice to the average American who is hurting now, facing the prospect of $4 a gallon gasoline, a lot of people facing — THE PRESIDENT: Wait, what did you just say? You’re predicting $4 a gallon gasoline? Q A number of analysts are predicting — THE PRESIDENT: Oh, yeah? Q — $4 a gallon gasoline this spring when they reformulate. THE PRESIDENT: That’s interesting. I hadn’t heard that. To put Bush’s mind-numbing mindlessness into context, it is worth noting that even White House press secretary Dana Perino had gotten the memo. Six months before Bush gave his deer-in-the-headlights response, the woman who earlier proclaimed her ignorance of the Cuban Missile Crisis discussed the $4 barrier with reporters at an October 16, 2007 press briefing: Q Dana, analysts say that gasoline prices could go as high as $4 a gallon because of the current run-up in the price of a barrel of oil. Does the White House have any plan to — for relief for the American consumer should gasoline get — MS. PERINO: Well, I’d refer you to the Department of Energy. Obviously they track that very closely. Last spring everyone in here said gasoline was going to go to four gallons — $4 a gallon, as well. Look, there’s no doubt that energy prices are too high. They disproportionately hurt low-income families that have to spend so much of their money on energy, and when those prices go up, it eats into the family budget on the other things that they want to be able to buy. Perino was right, of course, about the impact that $4 a gallon gas (it reached a high of $4.11 in July 2008) would have on working Americans. But that paled in comparison to the Bush Recession which devastated the economy. It was that calamity and the plummeting demand accompanying it, and not Dubya’s dubious powers of persuasion, which by November 2008 drove gas prices below $2 a gallon and the decline of a barrel of oil by almost $100 since its record high that July. But those days are over. As Paul Krugman explained this week: What the commodity markets are telling us is that we’re living in a finite world, in which the rapid growth of emerging economies is placing pressure on limited supplies of raw materials, pushing up their prices. And America is, for the most part, just a bystander in this story…. In particular, today, as in 2007-2008, the primary driving force behind rising commodity prices isn’t demand from the United States. It’s demand from China and other emerging economies. As more and more people in formerly poor nations are entering the global middle class, they’re beginning to drive cars and eat meat, placing growing pressure on world oil and food supplies. And those supplies aren’t keeping pace. Conventional oil production has been flat for four years; in that sense, at least, peak oil has arrived. Appearing Wednesday on CBS News to hype his new book, former Shell executive John Hofmeister concurred with Krugman’s analysis: “We’re right back to where we were in 2007 and 2008, in terms of U.S. demand. What’s different this time, however, is that Asia’s demand is much, much higher than two years ago. And the world is having a very difficult time getting past 85 million barrels-a-day of (crude oil) production.” As for the critics of President Obama’s policies on offshore drilling, even George W. Bush in 2008 admitted that in the near term “drill, baby, drill” wouldn’t do much to budge production or prices. “I readily concede that, you know, it’s not going to produce a barrel of oil tomorrow, but it is going to change the psychology.” Of course, it wouldn’t change the psychology of oil markets or Bush’s Republican Party. That unified block of climate change deniers has opposed President Obama’s alternative energy proposals at every turn. Instead, conservatives insist, for its energy future America should continue to rely on the jawbone of an ass. (This piece also appeared as Perrspectives .)

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enlarge Remember how the white supremacists at Council of Conservative Citizens got their panties in a wad over the plan to have a black man portray a Norse god in the movie version of Thor ? Now we have right-wing nimrods getting into the act, all because DC Comics has created a Muslim version of the Batman : The argument against Nightrunner, led by conservative blogger Warner Todd Huston, is based on the bigoted belief that a Muslim superhero is by definition an exercise in deceitful political correctness, and that Muslims are natively evil. Introduced in this month’s Detective Comics Annual #12 and Batman Annual #28, Nightrunner is a 22-year-old Algerian Muslim who’s lived in Paris his entire life (it seems reasonable to assume he was born in France, but at the very least he was raised there). Born Billai Asseiah, the character is uncommonly adept at the highly YouTubeable gymnastic form known as parkour. That and Asseiah’s sense of justice make him an ideal recruit for Bruce Wayne’s new Batman, Inc. initiative, whereby he franchises Batmen to cities all over the world. Huston views French Muslims — which is to say, immigrants or those descended from immigrants — as inauthentically French, and, as such, that Batman would choose a Muslim as Paris’ champion is gravely offensive to him and his loathsome ilk. DC Comics has decided that the “French savior,” the French Batman is to be a Muslim immigrant. The character’s name is Bilal Asselah and he is an Algerian Sunni Muslim and an immigrant… Apparently Batman couldn’t find any actual Frenchman to be the “French savior.” …it is pretty condescending to France, too. France is a proud nation. Yet DC Comics has made a foreigner the “French savior.” This will not sit well with many Frenchmen, for sure. What we really hope will not “sit well” with Frenchmen and Frenchwomen is Huston’s ugly assertion that French identification is exclusive to non-immigrants (read: white people). I’m not as sure as Andy Khouri that Huston — who is one of the regular contributors at the right-wing media critic outfit, NewsBusters — is a racist per se. What’s self-evident, however, is that he is a religious bigot and an ignorant, hatemongering xenophobe: Huston doubles down on the disgust and writes that a Muslim hero is patently ludicrous because Muslims are apparently congenitally terrorists. …in this age of international Muslim terrorism assaulting the whole world, Batman’s readers will be confused by what is really going on in the world. Through it all DC makes a Muslim in France a hero when French Muslims are at the center of some of the worst violence in the country’s recent memory. The true cause of the riots and violence between Frenchmen of European stock and that of immigrant Muslim stock is glossed over as if it doesn’t even exist. DC Comics makes the whole problem as simplistic as mere racism as if that is all there is to it ignoring the fact that Islam is the single most important factor in the strife. Huston refers to the civil unrest France saw in late 2005, when a state of emergency was declared after Muslim youths began rioting in Paris and other cities, burning thousands of cars and several buildings. Huston, Green and other bigots in the conservative media read the tragic situation as an expression of nefarious Islamic purpose, but most commentators and reporters who followed the event described a matter having more to do with social inequality than religion. As is the case in America, where there have also been riots, the economic and social underclass of France is populated largely by minorities and immigrants, and many of those immigrants are Muslims. You can read all of Huston’s attack here. We recommend a shower afterward, though.

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Lies Our Teachers Are Telling Us

What rights do you have on an airplane, the political honesty of one’s own eyes, and Virginia’s school textbooks are chock full of lies. These gems and more after the jump. On a regular basis, Truthdig brings you the news items and odds and ends that found their way to Larry Gross, director of the USC Annenberg School for Communication. A specialist in media and culture, art and communication, visual communication and media portrayals of minorities, Gross helped found the field of gay and lesbian studies. The links below open in a new window. Newer ones are on top. What Rights Do Delayed Airline Passengers Have? The holidays haven’t been very happy for the thousands of travelers stranded in airports in the Northeastern U.S. and Europe. With delays stretching into days, passengers reasonably start to wonder whether there’s anything they can do about it. Political Leanings Revealed by the Eyes It may be time to take the phrase “political viewpoint” literally. A new study suggests that liberals are more likely than conservatives to follow other people’s eye movements. Virginia Textbooks Rife With Errors Back in October, the Virginia fourth-grade textbook Our Virginia: Past and Present was caught turning Internet inaccuracies about black Confederate soldiers into schoolroom fact. Now, unsurprisingly, more bloopers have emerged from the apocrypha stew, reports the Washington Post. Death knell for ‘death panel’ debate? The debate over “death panels” is hard to kill — but at least one Senate Democratic aide says the issue has now become “Kryptonite for the Right,” thanks to the way a new Medicare regulation is written. Taboo transplant: How new poo defeats superbugs Even doctors recoil from faecal transplants – but you might get over such squeamishness if it was your only hope of beating a killer infection. Pepsi Launches Viscous “Snack” Drinks Facing stiff competition from Coke and Dr Pepper in the cola department, PepsiCo is turning to a niche market: snack drinks. “The company is hoping people will pay a premium for a new pureed fruit product that it considers thick enough to be a snack rather than a beverage,” reports the Wall Street Journal. The worsening journalistic disgrace at Wired For more than six months, Wired’s Senior Editor Kevin Poulsen has possessed—but refuses to publish—the key evidence in one of the year’s most significant political stories: the arrest of U.S. Army PFC Bradley Manning for allegedly acting as WikiLeaks’ source. The Internet Problem: when an abundance of choice becomes an issue Self publishing a book provides a wealth of opportunity, but decisions are harder when there are no constraints Political Contributions Rise During Key Votes Throughout the year, lawmakers have received cash from donors right around the time they’re writing or voting on new laws. Such moves are discouraged since ethics watchdogs say that even if there’s nothing necessarily illegal about the practice it can raise questions about the motivations to approve or reject certain measures. Related Entries November 12, 2010 Court Allows ‘DADT’ Policy for Now October 28, 2010 Why Anita Hill’s Testimony Matters

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You can watch the entire movie here. There must be something very wrong at the Vatican. The Pope’s new scapegoat for the Church’s sex abuse scandal is the 1970s. Belfast Telegraph: Victims of clerical sex abuse have reacted furiously to Pope Benedict’s claim yesterday that paedophilia wasn’t considered an “absolute evil” as recently as the 1970s. In his traditional Christmas address yesterday to cardinals and officials working in Rome, Pope Benedict XVI also claimed that child pornography was increasingly considered “normal” by society. “In the 1970s, paedophilia was theorised as something fully in conformity with man and even with children,” the Pope said. “It was maintained — even within the realm of Catholic theology — that there is no such thing as evil in itself or good in itself. There is only a ‘better than’ and a ‘worse than’. Nothing is good or bad in itself.” The Pope said abuse revelations in 2010 reached “an unimaginable dimension” which brought “humiliation” on the Church… read on I watched this gut wrenching documentary last night called Deliver Us From Evil , about a serial pedo-rapist that the Catholic Church enabled for three decades. I cried along with Mr. Jyono, who thought Father O’Grady was a friend to his family only to find out after O’Grady was arrested in another county that he had raped his daughter for seven years. Clearly the Church covered it up, as video testimony shows, and instead of dealing with the problem, sent him out of town so he could hunt for new victims. It would be as if the Attorney General of California, after arresting Ted Bundy for being a serial killer, decided to give him a bus ticket to Iowa and told him to just stay away from girls — while the AG then offered support with prayers to Bundy and maybe even a pension plan if kept quiet. What would Ted do? I’ve been covering the child abuse cases that have been revealed in recent times along with finding out the Vatican and their hierarchy , instead of acting like the moral authority they claim to be, covered up the hundreds of abusers and actually allowed them to destroy future families for decades. And so much of this happened under Cardinal Raztinger’s (Pope Benedict XVI) watch . The office led by Cardinal Ratzinger, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith , had actually been given authority over sexual abuse cases nearly 80 years earlier, in 1922, documents show and canon lawyers confirm. But for the two decades he was in charge of that office, the future pope never asserted that authority, failing to act even as the cases undermined the church’s credibility in the United States, Australia, Ireland and elsewhere. Bishop Geoffrey Robinson, an outspoken auxiliary bishop emeritus from Sydney, Australia, who attended the secret meeting in 2000, said that despite numerous warnings, top Vatican officials, including Benedict, took far longer to wake up to the abuse problems than many local bishops did. Digby writes: I’m fairly sure that pedophilia was considered an absolute evil in the 1970s. It was just covered up — mostly because of institutions like the Church which made even the thought of sex so shameful that even innocent victims of abuse were afraid to admit it. But whatever “context” he’s thinking of, in normal society sexual exploitation of children wasn’t part of it except on society’s fringe (just as it is today among certain fundamentalist sects .) {} There are many examples of our leadership and elite institutions and leadership failing, but I think this one is the best example. When even the Church that has made human sexuality a purely procreative necessity within sanctioned marriage is making excuses for pedophilia among its priests because of “the times” then it’s fairly clear that any institution can be thoroughly corrupted to its very core. It tends to create just a little mistrust among the people. You can see why blowhard Catholic sex-abuse apologists like Bill Donohue are around. To him, these child molesters weren’t even pedophiles. They make plenty of cash off of doing their best to beat back any criticism directed at the Church.

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War is Toxic

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War is Toxic

A new study has shown that the weaponry used in the U.S. assault on the Iraqi city of Fallujah six years ago have caused a spike in genetic damage of children born in the area. Researchers also discovered that malnutrition levels are almost 11 times higher than normal rates and have continued to rise in the first half of 2010. —JCL The Guardian: A study examining the causes of a dramatic spike in birth defects in the Iraqi city of Falluja has for the first time concluded that genetic damage could have been caused by weaponry used in US assaults that took place six years ago. The research, which will be published next week, confirms earlier estimates revealed by the Guardian of a major, unexplained rise in cancers and chronic neural-tube, cardiac and skeletal defects in newborns. The authors found that malformations are close to 11 times higher than normal rates, and rose to unprecedented levels in the first half of this year – a period that had not been surveyed in earlier reports. The findings, which will be published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, come prior to a much-anticipated World Health Organisation study of Falluja’s genetic health. They follow two alarming earlier studies, one of which found a distortion in the sex ratio of newborns since the invasion of Iraq in 2003 – a 15% drop in births of boys. Read more Related Entries November 12, 2010 Court Allows ‘DADT’ Policy for Now October 28, 2010 Why Anita Hill’s Testimony Matters

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