Home » Archives by category » News » Politics (Page 2014)
Cutting Medicare and Social Security

By Bill Schorr, Cagle Cartoons Related Entries December 6, 2010 World According to WikiLeaks December 6, 2010 Happy as a Hangman

Continue reading …

Sombreros

No Comment
Sombreros

By Petar Pismestrovic, Cagle Cartoons, Kleine Zeitung, Austria Related Entries December 6, 2010 World According to WikiLeaks December 6, 2010 Happy as a Hangman

Continue reading …
World According to WikiLeaks

By Taylor Jones, Cagle Cartoons, Politicalcartoons.com Related Entries December 5, 2010 U.S. Orders Diplomats to Stop Telling Truth December 2, 2010 Sweden’s Top Court Pushes for Assange’s Arrest

Continue reading …

On Monday's edition of The View, Condi Rice appeared as a guest co-host, and Joy Behar began by asking: “I have a question for you. I'm invited to the White House Christmas party this Friday. I'm very excited. I've never been before. [Applause] And I was wondering if you could tell me what I'm supposed to like, know.” We've come quite a way from Behar sneered about Rice that “she's drunk the Kool-Aid.” Rice drew some notice for saying Team Obama needs to get the lead out on the WikiLeaks issue before America looks like a “paper tiger.” Whoopi Goldberg asked about the talk that Julian Assange has a “doomsday file” to release if anyone gets their hands on him: GOLDBERG: That to me sort of sounds like a terrorist. Cause that's what terrorists seem to do. Try to hold countries hostage in fear. Am I crazy or just being nutty? read more

Continue reading …

Yes Sir

No Comment
Yes Sir

By Mr. Fish Related Entries December 5, 2010 U.S. Orders Diplomats to Stop Telling Truth December 2, 2010 Sweden’s Top Court Pushes for Assange’s Arrest

Continue reading …

Clarence B. Jones, appearing in 2008 on Tavis Smiley’s PBS show. I had lunch with my oldest son yesterday and he asked if I thought there’d be a primary challenge to Obama. I told him it wouldn’t happen unless the black voters supported it, and I didn’t think we were quite there yet. That was before I read Clarence Jones’ Huffington Post piece this morning. Jones was a personal advisor, legal counsel, draft speech writer and close friend of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Now he’s a Scholar in Residence at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Research and Education Institute at Stanford University. When someone with those credentials is calling for a primary challenge to Obama, something very interesting is happening. Outlier — or crack in the dam? We’ll see: When few other public figures of national stature spoke out about Johnson’s escalation of the war in Vietnam, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr, at New York City’s Riverside Church, before a meeting of Concerned Layman and Clergy, on April 4th, 1967, said “A time comes when silence is betrayal.” For Dr. King, it was “time to break the silence.” And, so it is with Obama’s continued squandering of the extraordinary support he developed for his election as President. Go and check out the video clips of the panorama of faces that assembled in Grant Park in Chicago after the election results confirmed his victory. Check out the million + people who came to Washington to witness his Inauguration . It is not easy to consider challenging the first African-American to be elected as President of the United States. But, regrettably, I believe that the time has come to do this. It is time for Progressives to stop whining and arguing among themselves about whether President Obama will or will not do this or that. Obama is no different than any other President, nominated by his national party. He was elected with the hard work and 24/7 commitment of persons who believed and enlisted in his campaign for “Hope” and “Change.” You don’t have to be a rocket scientist nor have a PhD in political science and sociology to see clearly that Obama has abandoned much of the base that elected him. He has done this because he no longer respects, fears or believes those persons who elected him have any alternative, but to accept what he does, whether they like it or not. It is time for those persons who constituted the movement that enabled Senator Barack Obama to be elected to “break their silence”; to indicate that they no longer will sit on their hands, and only let off verbal steam and ineffective sound and fury, and “hope” for the best. The answer is blowin’ in the wind. The pursuit of the war in Afghanistan in support of a certifiably corrupt Afghan government and the apparent willingness to retreat from his campaign commitment of no further tax cuts for the rich, his equivocal and foot dragging leadership to end DADT, his TARP for Wall Street, but, equivocal insufficient attention to the unemployment and housing foreclosures of Main Street, suggest that the template of the 1968 challenge to the reelection of President Lyndon Johnson now must be thoughtfully considered for Obama in 2012.

Continue reading …
Add Idaho bomb-builder to list of violent extremists inspired by Glenn Beck

Click here to view this media Well, you can add another name to the list of violent nutcases inspired to act by Glenn Beck — this time, a northern Idaho militiaman arrested last summer for building grenades at his home in the Panhandle. From Meghann Cuniff at the Spokesman-Review : A self-described militia leader pleaded guilty this week to federal gun charges connected to a grenade manufacturing operation at his trailer in Spirit Lake, Idaho. Kenneth B. Kimbley Jr., 58, discussed bombing local bridges with an undercover federal agent and made threatening statements toward President Barack Obama, leading investigators last July to seize 20,000 ammunition rounds and several firearms from Kimbley’s property, where he and other suspected militia members gathered to construct grenades, according to court documents. Kimbley, who remains in federal custody, pleaded guilty to Monday to unlawful possession of a firearm and attempt to make a firearm in violation of the National Firearms Act. He faces up to 10 years in prison when he’s sentenced Feb. 22. … An undercover agent said Kimbley described himself as the leader of the “Brotherhood of America Patriots” militia and said “he would kill members of his group that did not follow orders,” according to court documents. Kimbely reportedly described extensive booby traps he’d built and said his militia’s purpose “was to resist in the event the government started rounding up the patriots” and to resist foreign invasions or societal breakdowns. His public defender, Kim Deater, did not return a phone call seeking comment. In court documents, she described Kimbley as a nonthreatening man who has passionate political views. Though prosecutors have emphasized his militia ties and his dislike for Obama, Kimbley “made absolutely no threats to harm anyone at anytime,” Deater wrote in court documents. “In fact, everything said by Mr. Kimbley is no different than what his idol, TV commentator Glenn Beck, typically states on the air and is protected free speech.” This is now the third such case, following Byron Williams, the would-be Tides Foundation terrorist, and Richard Poplawski, the Pittsburgh cop-killer who believed, thanks to Glenn Beck, that authorities were going to take his guns away. As Leah Nelson at SPLC’s Hatewatch notes: The connection between Kimbley’s beliefs and Beck’s provocative on-air statements seems clear, especially his fear that the government plans to round up and intern liberty-loving Americans, a fear that was also expressed by Poplawski and Byron. Moreover, this is now the fourth violent incident in which Fox News’ mainstreaming of extremism played a significant role : Make no mistake: Glenn Beck has been inciting acts of terrorist violence, and the Byron Williams case clearly establishes it — even though it is far from the first such case. It in fact was preceded by several similar cases in which the dehumanizing rhetoric, scapegoating and conspiracist smears promoted by Fox clearly played a powerful role in the violence that ensued: — Jim David Adkisson’s shooting attack on a Knoxville Unitarian church. Adkisson left behind a manifesto that repeated numerous right-wing talking points generated by Fox commentators and specifically cited a Bernard Goldberg book . His library at home was stocked with books by Bill O’Reilly, Sean Hannity and Michael Savage . — Richard Poplawski’s shooting of three Pittsburgh police officers, because he believed a conspiracy theory that President Obama intended to take Americans’ guns away from them, and he reportedly believed the cops had arrived to carry it out. Poplawski, a white supremacist, liked to post Beck videos about FEMA concentration camps to the Stormfront comments board . — Scott Roeder’s assassination of Dr. George Tiller. Roeder was heavily involved in Operation Rescue and avidly read its newsletters — which featured weekly pieces from Bill O’Reilly, including several attacking Tiller as a “baby killer” — and its website, which liked to feature O’Reilly videos attacking Dr. Tiller. Indeed, O’Reilly had indulged a high-profile and unusually obsessive ( not to mention vicious ) jihad against Tiller, resulting in 42 such attacks on Tiller, 24 of which referred to him generically as a “baby killer.”

Continue reading …

The Christmas season is “a tough time for supporters of abortion rights who have just as much excitement and take just as much joy in expecting a baby in their family as does everyone else, but end up feeling defensive and grumpy about the baby Jesus being hijacked for political gain.” That's how former Catholics for Choice president Frances Kissling lamented the enthusiastic response of pro-life activists to a church ad campaign in the United Kingdom that shows a sonogram with the unborn baby sporting a halo. “He's on His Way,” reads the accompanying tag line. “Christmas starts with Christ,” continues the caption in smaller print at the bottom of the advertisement. Kissling's lament was published on December 4 for the Washington Post's “On Faith” website. read more

Continue reading …

Frustration is boiling over, not just among progressives, but even middle-of-the-road Democrats. Maybe it’s time for a little less conventional wisdom and a little more innovation, because this debate shouldn’t be this hard. It just should not. But according to the New York Times , Democrats are considering a two-year minimum extension of all the Bush-era tax rates, which feels a lot like capitulation. Saturday’s vote was a disaster in so many ways. On top of the ten non-voting Republicans, five Senate Democrats peeled off from the pack to join Republicans, including Russ Feingold. Feingold’s reason for voting “no” was because he believes they all should expire, but I dare any one of you to find another person who knows that. Instead, we have ridiculous Republican talking points claiming “bipartisan support” for extensions. And so now, we get this? Rather than extending the tax rates only on income described by Democrats as middle class — up to $250,000 a year for couples and $200,000 for individuals — the deal would also keep the rates for higher earners, probably for two years. In return, Republicans said they would probably agree to extend jobless aid for the long-term unemployed. Probably? PROBABLY? What the hell is that, if not the most arrogant response I’ve heard yet from these deranged maniacs in Congress? Seriously, has the world gone delusional while I was busy reading Wikileaks cables? KagroX over at Daily Kos has a bit of a different analysis: It’s time to stop trying to understand Republicans in terms of figuring out what they want and trying to find middle ground. If “what they want” were even really of interest to Republicans at this point, then they’d have been over the moon at having a legitimate shot at passing an amendment to make all the tax cuts permanent today. But they walked away from that (as they walked away from a legitimate shot at passing both 1099 repeal and a $39 billion stimulus rescission earlier this week, totally abandoning their “tax cuts don’t have to be paid for” rhetoric in the process) because “what they want” at this point is for Democrats to be seen losing as often as possible, on as many things as possible. Read the whole thing and you’ll find out who the real leader of the Republican Senate caucus is. Hint: It’s not Mitch McConnell. Digby expands on the whole debate and observes : I also think the Democrats are idiots not to have dispensed with this issue early on. But I’m guessing they too think this issue isn’t a winner for them so they are always just planned to punt. But that raises the question again about the viability of the party. If they cannot even make a winning argument out of cutting taxes for 98% of the people then I’m not sure what they’re good for. Seriously. What the hell are they good for if they can’t manage this without looking like idiots? Instead, we get this piece of brilliant analysis from the New York Times article: Administration officials said the negotiations were focused on the question of extending the tax rates for one or two years, with a three-year extension highly unlikely, even though that time frame would probably eliminate the tax fight as an urgent issue in the 2012 elections. Many Republicans say they want a permanent extension of the rates, or as long an extension as possible. Democrats say they would not mind the issue coming up during Mr. Obama’s re-election bid, because they see it as politically helpful to them in painting Republicans as defenders of the rich. The debate, of course, could cut the other way, with Republicans again portraying Democrats as seeking to raise taxes. Earth to Democrats, earth to Democrats, come in, Democrats. Tune in, pay attention. It doesn’t resonate, and why would they possibly think it would resonate in 2012 after giving in to GOP terrorist demands in 2010? On what basis would they be able to even think that, much less say it out loud? From my admittedly not-inside perspective, it seems to me that there is only one choice, and it’s not an especially good one. It’s principled but politically lethal. Call their bluff, let the whole package expire, and then watch Republicans try to reinstate them next year. Of course, it will also sweep unemployment extenders out with it, during the holidays no less. We’re down to a Catch-22, or Catch-2010. Either do a deal with the lunatic terrorists on the GOP side of the aisle, or leave millions of unemployed people without a safety net. I don’t know whether I would have the stomach to play that out or not. If any extension is considered, it should be for the exact same amount of time they guarantee extending unemployment insurance, with no strings attached. Or better yet, write a poison pill into this tax cut extension, requiring those millionaires benefiting to create a minimum number of jobs with their tax cut or lose it. For ten years these rates have not created jobs, no matter what the whining loonies on the right say. Make them put facts where their bluster is. Give them their extension, but make it contingent on creating a minimum number of jobs. If they don’t or can’t, they get bumped to the higher rate. Any deal is a Faustian bargain that will haunt Democrats until they start changing their tune (or hire a PR firm with some chops). They need to repeat this over and over and over: Taxes are patriotic. Taxes build roads and dams and bolster our infrastructure. Taxes make our country strong. Taxes create jobs, strengthen the economy. This whole debate has ignored the idea of taxes as an act of patriotism. I lay the blame for that on Democrats, who hem, haw, and apologize instead of holding them up as something good. I’d still like to think the House could force expiration. Nancy Pelosi has the guts to do it, too. But again, at what price? Taking anything away from the unemployed right now is probably too costly, not to mention the fate of the START treaty, DADT repeal, and the DREAM Act. There I go again, imagining a functional government instead of one that’s stymied again and again by insane right-wingers who will stop at nothing to defeat Democrats and this President, even if it means taking the whole country down with it.

Continue reading …

I have to laugh at how gullible these teabaggers are. They really thought these assorted clowns and crooks were going to be different, huh? I wonder how they feel about their heroes going to D.C. with their hands out to the big money people: After Francisco “Quico” Canseco beat Rep. Ciro Rodriguez (D-Tex.) as part of the Republican wave on Nov. 2, the tea party favorite declared: “It’s going to be a new day in Washington.” Two weeks later, Canseco was in the heart of Washington for a $1,000-a-head fundraiser at the Capitol Hill Club. The event–hosted by Reps. Pete Sessions (R-Tex.) and Jeb Hensarling (R-Tex.)–was aimed at paying off more than $1.1 million in campaign debts racked up by Canseco, much of it from his own pocket. After winning election with an anti-Washington battle cry, Canseco and other incoming Republican freshmen have rapidly embraced the capital’s culture of big-money fundraisers, according to new campaign-finance reports and other records. Dozens of freshmen lawmakers have held receptions at Capitol Hill bistros and corporate townhouses in recent weeks, taking money from K Street lobbyists and other powerbrokers within days of their victories. Newly elected House members have raised at least $2 million since the election , according to preliminary Federal Election Commission records filed last week, and many more contributions have yet to be tallied. The aggressive fundraising efforts underscore the financial pressures facing new members of Congress even before they take their seats. The contributions also represent a symbolic challenge for the Republican class of 2010, many of whom gained office by running against the ways of official Washington and monied interests. “The lobbyists are all saying, ‘Welcome to Washington; let me help pay off your debt,’” said Nancy Watzman, who tracks political fundraisers for the Sunlight Foundation, a watchdog group. “It’s particularly interesting when so many of this year’s freshmen were running against Washington. But as soon as they get elected, they come to Washington and put out their hand.”

Continue reading …