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Chris Matthews Says He Can’t Tell Howard Fineman’s Political Leaning

Chris Matthews said Wednesday that he can't tell what Howard Fineman's political leaning is. Such humorously occurred at the end of a “Hardball” segment shortly after the host had no problem identifying his other guest as “center-right” (video follows with transcript and commentary): read more

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Rachel Maddow Takes President Obama to Task for Federal Worker Pay Freeze

Click here to view this media Rachel Maddow has some negotiating advice for President Obama after his announcement that he will support the Republican’s plan to freeze wages for federal employees — if you’re going to make a concession, get something for it in return. And from Dave Dayen over at FDL, apparently Organizing for America thinks this is somehow a good idea — OFA Tries to Get Supporters to Write Letters to the Editor Praising a Federal Worker Pay Freeze . I hate to break it to them but if I send a letter to the editor, it’s not going to be one praising this bone headed decision. MADDOW: Since the start of the Obama administration, Charlie Brown and Lucy with the football has been the go-to metaphor for liberals trying to explain what happens when the White House tries to negotiate with Republicans. The Republicans, of course, are Lucy, kindly holding the football. And every time Charlie Brown thinks he‘s got to deal with Lucy or Obama thinks he‘s got a deal with Congressional Republicans, everybody‘s going to work together, Lucy is going to hold that football. She‘s going to hold it steady. And then, just as Charlie Brown is about to kick it, she pulls it away. And Charlie Brown never learns. Lucy always pulls it down at the last moment causing Charlie Brown to kick at nothing and fall down over and over and over again. Why won‘t Charlie Brown learn, and why does President Obama keep trying to negotiate with Republicans when the Republicans always disappoint him? That has been the central cartoon-based metaphor around which liberals have understood the predictable the pitfalls and faults of bipartisanship in the Obama era. I have a suggested refinement to the metaphor and it involves removing Lucy from the equation. I know this is bad in terms of gender parody in our metaphors, but the fact Republicans don‘t want to help out on policy is no longer surprising, totally predicable and therefore maybe not that politically important. The important political decisions right now are not anything having to do with Republicans. It‘s whether or not Democrats can figure out a way to succeed without them. Republicans are not going to help. That‘s settled. That‘s done. Stick a fork in it, et cetera. What are Democrats going to do about it? If today‘s presidential announcement about a federal employee salary freeze has anything to do with it, apparently, the Democratic game plan is to pull the ball away from themselves whenever they try to kick it. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) BARACK OBAMA, UNITED STATES PRESIDENT: Today, I‘m proposing a two-year pay freeze for all civilian federal workers. (END VIDEO CLIP) MADDOW: You know, if you‘re trying to negotiate policy with someone, it is always a good idea to have in mind what you are willing to give up, what your concessions will be during the negotiation. But this White House consistently gives up its concessions at the start before getting anything in return. They did this on health reform. The president on record saying he supported a single-payer system, saying he thought that would be the best thing for the country. He then immediately conceded that and took it off the table. Rather than start from that position and give it up in exchange for something else for the other side moving some distance closer to you, single payer was off the table from the beginning. On the stimulus, the administration knew that tax cuts were the least stimulative thing the government could spend its money on. Knowing that, they conceded at the outset to devote just under 40 percent of the stimulus bill to tax cuts even before getting any concessions from the other side in return. On cap and trade, they put concessions on the table right from the start. They would increase the number of nuclear power plants. They would allow a big expansion of offshore drilling, both of which would be awesome things to trade away for votes from the other side. But they gave them away for no votes. What did they get in exchange for giving Republicans something they dearly wanted? Goose egg. Precisely nothing. They offered their concession without getting anything in return. We saw that same strategy today, with the pay freeze for federal employees. This is something public sector workers and people concerned that the public sector remains an attractive option for the best talent in the country – this is something they worry about. It‘s sort of a thumb in the eye for the Democratic base. What do they get in return for that? Is that distant polite applause from Republicans? No. No. Actually, it‘s nothing. Bupkis. Crickets. They don‘t even get polite applause. It may make sense in negotiations to know what you are willing to trade away. It may make sense to have in mind at the outset of negotiations what your concessions will be when it gets to the point of negotiation where you have to trade away something. It may make sense to have those things in mind from the outside, though. What will you trade away for? The key word, though – the key idea is trade. You should get something back when you give up something that is of value to you, or else it‘s not so much trading as it is getting pooched over and over and over again.

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MSNBC's “Morning Joe” panel hit the Republican congressional leadership Wednesday for not admitting its faults in dealing with the President the past two years. After playing a video clip of leading House Republicans Eric Cantor and John Boehner praising President Obama for his admission of not having reached out enough to the GOP, “Morning Joe” co-host Joe Scarborough challenged the GOP to do the same. “And now the polite thing to do…is to say 'And you know what? We could have reached out more, too',” ex-Republican congressman Scarborough said of the congressional GOP. “That would have cost them nothing,” he preached. Co-host Mika Brzezinski complained that the GOP focused on the negative, and scolded them for speaking out like they did. “I just heard them emphasizing anything that the President might have given a little to put out an olive branch,” she griped, “and then they focus on the negative.”

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“Morning Joe” Scarborough is lending his name and commentary to the launch of a new group dedicated to…what, exactly? Via Huffington Post : Scarborough, a Republican, former Florida congressman and host of “Morning Joe” on MSNBC, will participate in the debut event of “No Labels” on December 13 at Columbia University in New York. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg is also expected to take part, along with an array of other self-described centrists, including retiring Sen. Evan Bayh (D-Ind.), Sen. Joe Lieberman, (I-Conn.), former Rep. Tom Davis (R-Va.), Rep. Chris Shays (R-Conn), Los Angeles’s Democratic Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, Sen. Deb Stabenow (D-Mich.), former Gov. Christie Todd Whitman (R-N.J.) and former Rep. Sherwood Boehlert (R-N.Y.) A look at the “About” page on NoLabels.org reveals a list of “Founding Leaders”, including Dave Walker, David Frum, Mark McKinnon, and Clinton strategist Nancy Jacobson. By the way, that Dave Walker is the same David M. Walker who is head of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, that non-partisan group who helped write the Catfood Commission chairs’ recommendations. To give Frum, et al their due, they are not crazy like most Republicans. This is good. They should represent the conservative majority viewpoint, not the teabirchers and their birther buddies. With that said, this organization smells like a feel-good way to attract disaffected pieces of the electorate who don’t really bother to learn enough to actually test what they believe in. It’s more “no red state, no blue state” nonsense in an environment where bullies dominate the national conversation. As for Morning Joe: But he is teasingly vague about what he might consider doing on his own. He avoided a direct answer to the question earlier this month at Harvard, saying only: “There are so many issues where America is united… I think we’re coming up on a very historic time. I’m very happy where I am right now, but you never know.” One thing Scarborough knows: he’s outraged by Palin’s attacks on the experience and bona fides of two Republican presidents, Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush . He indignantly called her out in a Politico website column. “This is one Republican,” he wrote acidly,” who would prefer that the former half-governor promote her reality shows and hawk her books without demeaning the reputations of Presidents Reagan and Bush.” Color me shocked.

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Amazon Evicts WikiLeaks

In addition to selling books, Amazon does a nice side business hosting websites. WikiLeaks was paying for space on Amazon servers this week until the retailer sent the leakers packing . No comment so far from Amazon, but WikiLeaks, now hosted in Sweden , responded with a dig about “the land of the free.” According to Computer World, WikiLeaks turned to Amazon in order to cope with the ongoing denial of service attacks meant to shut down the site.

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Fear of the 99ers

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Fear of the 99ers

Click here to view this media The clip is from earlier this month on Fox Business, but seeing as perhaps 800,000 people are about to lose their unemployment benefits at midnight, and a further 1.2 million on December 31, it seems as good a time as any to see the arguments presented through the Fox Looking Glass. For instance, the host notes armed guards are now being posted at unemployment centers, in case anyone “loses it”, and then asks if his guests are armed. Assured both aren’t “packing”, things move along to the more natural questions of just how bad things are out there in the job market (otherwise known as “the real world”), but not before Bo Dietl suggests the strong likelihood of such incidents with the coming Holiday season. Former Senator Al D’Amato thinks that if only the Obama’s wouldn’t take foreign trips that would somehow pay for unemployment extensions. Near the middle things go off the rails again when one of the guests dares to say out loud that all the Bush Tax Cuts be repealed and “everyone pay their fair share” to get us out of this mess. An uproar naturally ensues for the next 2-3 minutes on how horrible it would be for small buiness owners (aka millionaires) to be subjected to any such thing. All in all, probably a typical moment in everyday Fox Land, where the unemployed are painted as lazy and criminal, while the rich are not expected to be subjected to any personal sacrifice whatsoever.

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Gay Rights Activist/MSNBC Anchor Contessa Brewer: Support for DADT ‘Doesn’t Make A Lot of Sense’

During Wednesday's 12PM ET hour on MSNBC, anchor Contessa Brewer attacked those who want to maintain the military's 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' policy: “…the Marine Corps and Catholic chaplains, who say they support the policy on moral grounds. It doesn't make a lot of sense…if it's homosexuality that they have a problem with – they're basically saying, 'Yeah, just keep lying about it.'” Later in the hour, Brewer interviewed Connecticut Senator Joe Lieberman about his support for repealing the policy. She labeled Arizona Senator John McCain as the villain preventing repeal: “So John McCain has been one of the most formidable foes when it comes to repealing this policy….Both Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Admiral Mike Mullen support repealing this policy. Have you talked with Senator McCain? Is he willing to give?” read more

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‘Daily Show’: The Informant!

The WikiLeaks diplomatic drama has caused the collective twisting of multiple pairs of knickers in the highly interconnected international diplomacy and espionage circles, and of course, whatever vexes those in power is prime comedy material for the minds that bring you “The Daily Show.” Related Entries November 30, 2010 Hillary Gets Wiki-Served November 29, 2010 Wiki-Damage Control Time for Clinton

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Here’s the NYT’s Bill Keller and Carne Ross on the BBC debating WikiLeaks. As you can see, Keller seems to think it’s the job of the press to check with the administration before publishing information. There are many opinions on the WikiLeaks affair coming out with lightning speed and I think for the first time since President Obama has been in office we’re seeing true bipartisan agreement — both Democrats and Republicans want to shut WikiLeaks down. It’s a real win-win for right-wingers, who are openly calling for Assange’s assassination (and a few are shocked that he’s still breathing right now), but they are cool if the revelations do hurt President Obama. Roy Odroso via The Village Voice: Rightbloggers generally take a two-pronged approach to the leaks: They believe the new document dump is an unpardonable breach of U.S. security — except to the extent that it may be used to denigrate the Obama Administration, it which case they feel it deserves wider dissemination. — None of this altered their feeling that by leaking this info Assange was aiding the enemy, and possible guilty of murder. “Gosh, isn’t it nice that the enemy will be able to identify Iraqis who died by name and whose side they were fighting on, so they can go after their families, either to kill them or recruit them, depending on the circumstances?” said BizzyBlog . “What a guy this Mr. Assange is.” “Julian Assange: Jerkoff troop killer,” wrote The North Star National . National Review ‘s Jonah Goldberg asked, “Why wasn’t Assange garroted in his hotel room years ago?” …Last weekend the diplomatic leaks was released, and with them came the usual calls for Assange’s death and/or detention. “Julian Assange, Why is He Still Breathing?” asked Paladin’s Page . “Assange should be looking at the inside of a container on a ship doing lazy racetracks around the Indian Ocean,” said Blackfive . “I won’t think twice if Julian Assange meets the cold blade of an assassin,” said Donald Douglas . Etc. Sarah Palin shows her ignorance knows no bounds by calling Assange a “traitor. ” Maybe she thinks he lives in Hollyweird? A complete denouncing of Wilkileaks. but it goes farther than that. Even our media is joining in with the politicians and are taking on the same POV. Glenn Greenwald has a great post up about the reaction of CNN’s Wolf Blitzer, The NY Times and other media figures who are going on record denouncing Wikileaks . Then, with some exceptions, we have the group which — so very revealingly — is the angriest and most offended about the WikiLeaks disclosures: the American media, Our Watchdogs over the Powerful and Crusaders for Transparency. On CNN last night, Wolf Blitzer was beside himself with rage over the fact that the U.S. Government had failed to keep all these things secret from him… It’s one thing for the Government to shield its conduct from public disclosure, but it’s another thing entirely for the U.S. media to be active participants in that concealment effort. As The Guardian ‘s Simon Jenkins put it in a superb column that I can’t recommend highly enough: “The job of the media is not to protect power from embarrassment. . . . Clearly, it is for governments, not journalists, to protect public secrets.” But that’s just it: the media does exactly what Jenkins says is not their job, which — along with envy over WikiLeaks’ superior access to confidential information — is what accounts for so much media hostility toward that group. As the headline of John Kampfner’s column in The Independent put it : ” Wikileaks shows up our media for their docility at the feet of authority .” Most political journalists rely on their relationships with government officials and come to like them and both identify and empathize with them. By contrast, WikiLeaks is truly adversarial to those powerful factions in exactly the way that these media figures are not: hence, the widespread media hatred and contempt for what WikiLeaks does. Just look at how important it was for Bill Keller to emphasize that the Government is criticizing WikiLeaks but not The New York Times ; having the Government pleased with his behavior is his metric for assessing how good his “journalism” is. If the Government is patting him on the head, then it’s proof that he acted “responsibly.” That servile-to-power mentality is what gets exposed by the contrast Wikileaks provides. Shouldn’t the news journalists out there only be reporting the story itself instead of interjecting their opinion on the propriety of WikiLeaks’ actions? There are plenty of opinionators to do that for them already. Glenn mentions instances where WikiLeaks hasn’t been perfect in their execution and we’ll have to see how it all works out, but when BushCo decided that it was just fine to illegally wiretap phone conversations, the government lost all its credibility on privacy issues. Digby has an excellent take : My personal feeling is that any allegedly democratic government that is so hubristic that it will lie blatantly to the entire world in order to invade a country it has long wanted to invade probably needs a self-correcting mechanism. There are times when it’s necessary that the powerful be shown that there are checks on its behavior, particularly when the systems normally designed to do that are breaking down. Now is one of those times. I also think that all the sturm und drang about leaks is fairly bizarre considering that the technology to transfer large amounts of secret information has been out there for some time and has shown its capability in many facets of our lives already. Privacy and secrecy are very abstract concepts in this age. I would have expected the government to have anticipated this kind of document transfer in advance and guarded against it. As for the substance of the revelations, I don’t know what the results will be. But in the world of diplomacy, embarrassment is meaningful and I’m not sure that it’s a bad thing for all these people to be embarrassed right now. Puncturing a certain kind of self-importance — especially national self-importance — may be the most worthwhile thing they do. A little humility is long overdue. Since the media willingly aided and abetted Bush and his cronies in the distortions of the news that led us into war with Iraq, I do understand why they are reacting the way they are — after all, the habit of sucking up to power is a tough one to break once you get addicted to it. But it’s a sad thing to witness all the same.

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‘Degenerate Art’ Resurfaces in Berlin

An assortment of sculptures once derided by the Nazis as prime examples of “degenerate art”—complete with a Third Reich-sponsored show under that heading—has been partially recovered and reunited for a comeback exhibit at Berlin’s Neues Museum. Related Entries November 30, 2010 Hillary Gets Wiki-Served November 29, 2010 Wiki-Damage Control Time for Clinton

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