Apparently someone let the interns loose at Fox News with what they posted over the holiday weekend, or their “news” network just doesn’t care that they’re looked at as a joke more than they already are. From Mediaite — FoxNation.com Reposts Anti-Obama Article From The Onion, Doesn’t Mention It’s A Joke : Most people recognize The Onion as the Peabody Award-winning satire machine that it is. Some people, however, don’t. Which is why we get a story like this every few months. Of course, it’s sometimes easy to mistake an Onion article for the real thing since the writers make sure to skew as close to their targets as possible. It also doesn’t hurt when real news outlets reprint the satirists’ work and decide not to let their readers know it’s a joke, as Fox Nation did today . enlarge Credit: Mediaite Yes, the Fox Nation editors were apparently so enamored with an Onion piece from today entitled “Frustrated Obama Sends Nation Rambling 75,000-Word E-Mail” that they reposted the first two paragraphs in their culture section with nary a sign as to its fictional nature. The only clue that this wasn’t real (besides a quick peek at your inbox to confirm that Barack Obama hasn’t been emailing you) was a link at the bottom instructing readers to go to TheOnion.com for the real story. This tiny link was, unfortunately, not enough for the vast majority of FN readers. At least, that’s the way it seems from the comments section. Whether Fox Nation reposted this story without a disclaimer accidentally, as a prank, or because of something more sinister, we’ll leave up to you decide. However, Fox Nation should be aware that, sad as it may be, not everyone is familiar with the brilliance that is The Onion. And for every one of my aunts who forwards me this article today, I’m going to be very, very angry at them. I included an Onion video linked above which apparently one of the commenters here might not have realized was satire as well. If they did they forgot to put the words satire or snark into their response. I’ll just leave one last note on Fox and this story. If they were actually just incompetent or lazy instead of intentionally misleading their readers, it means their network is even worse than I thought. They’re not only feeding their listeners and viewers a line of B.S. when they mean to, but by accident as well. Bravo Rupert and Roger. You’ve managed to take your propaganda network to a new low.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Heather has already talked about the right’s revisionist history around Thanksgiving that cropped up this year, but the story isn’t complete without discussing Rush Limbaugh’s sneering attack on President Obama’s Thanksgiving proclamation : Every cliche that is wrong about Thanksgiving shows up in his proclamation. The Pilgrims show up at Plymouth. The Indians had been there for thousands of years. We get off the boats. We don’t know how to feed ourselves. The Indians show us how. They shared their skill in agriculture, which helped the early colonists survive and whose rich culture continues to add to our nation’s Heritage. Is it possible he believes it? I don’t doubt that he believes it, and even if he doesn’t believe it, he wants everybody else to believe it. Obama believes that this nation is fatally flawed since its founding, even before its founding, so it stands to reason — you know, a lot of people did not hear the true story of Thanksgiving until I wrote it in my book in the early nineties. I can remember Snerdley and H.R. were stunned when they heard the first story of Thanksgiving, the real story, because we’d all been taught a variation of the Indians saved us. We had to draw pictures of it in school, that’s exactly right, art projects of the Indians saving us. Well, that would be because they actually did save us — largely through teaching white settlers agricultural techniques: Time and familiarity has reduced to quaint memory the crucial nature of Indian agriculture for white settlers on the Atlantic coast early in the seventeenth century. Every American school child can recite the story of Squanto and his service to the Pilgrims at Plymouth. It is a charming incident in our historical texts culminating in a grand feast of thanksgiving. The harsh reality of the time, as William Bradford well knew and recorded, inscribed a bleaker circumstance. Without the seed corn and beans Bradford’s fellow adventurers unearthed in November 1620, survival of the colony was doubtful. Without Squanto to teach them the arts of New World agriculture the Pilgrims’ future was likely to be short indeed. The settlers’ failure to master Squanto’s teaching forced the colony to rely on food supplies purchased from successful Indian farmers. Not until the second year did the Pilgrims’ own fields produce in sufficient abundance to assure survival. To the south, in Virginia, the Jamestown settlement had already benefited from Indian agriculture. On at least two occasions the imperial chieftain, Powhatan, provided Jamestown with sufficient food to stave off disaster. The Jamestown settlers and later commentators seldom understood Powhatan’s motivation and apparent inconstancy toward the settlement. A broader view of the chief’s effort to establish an empire in the Chesapeake area might shed some light on the seeming enigma, but for the Englishmen at Jamestown the fact that lie came and with food was enough. To the good fortune of Plymouth and Jamestown the coastal Indians produced food in quantity. The coastal tribes’ ability to feed themselves and the white settlements belied the popular conception of Indian agriculture in that region as bare subsistence. Indeed, where investigators have explored the question a different picture emerged. In southern New England at least, Indian agriculture accounted for over 65 percent of the native population’s diet and surplus production for trade and storage was common. In any event, it did not take the Plymouth colony long to discover that their gift from the Indians had a value beyond feeding the settlement. Within four years after their arrival at Plymouth settlers profited from Indian agriculture and entered into relationships that dominated Indian-white contacts for the next two hundred years and more. In the fall of 1625 Governor William Bradford sent a boatload of corn up the Kennebec River to trade with the interior tribes for furs. His men returned with a store of beaver and other furs that financed the colony’s needs for the next year. In later years Massachusetts further developed its fur trade, raised its own corn for export, and purchased corn from the Indians for resale. You can also read William Bradford’s eyewitness account for more. Now it is true that Bradford’s account also details how the Pilgrims discovered that communal farming was a distinctly inferior scheme to private farming, which is where Stossel and Limbaugh obtain their claim that the first Thanksgiving was about the failure of socialism — which, as Brian at RightWingWatch has detailed already, is a load of bollocks and a deliberate misreading of the history. As Digby says : At this point it’s clear that according to Rush, there’s literally nothing good you can say about a racial minority in America (unless they are dutifully serving as right wing poster children.) Of course not. Because in Rushtopia, white people are the cream of creation, and any suggestion that their inferiors might actually have helped them survive and thrive is an outrageous slander upon the race.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Torture promoter Marc Thiessen did his best to continue to earn his spot as number 6 on Salon’s The War Room Hack Thirty during this interview on Fox’s America Live. Thiessen adds his name to the list of conservatives who are bashing the current lame-duck session of Congress as somehow corrupt or, as Thiessen says here, that “they have no legitimacy”. As our friends at Media Matters pointed out back in August, conservatives seem to have some selective memory when it comes to how Republicans spent their time when they were in charge of Congress during the lame-duck session when Bill Clinton was president. Conservatives disappear GOP’s Clinton impeachment to bash “corrupt” Democrat-led lame duck session : Conservative media figures have repeatedly claimed or suggested that it would be unprecedented and “corrupt” for Democrats to address “controversial” issues during Congress’ lame duck session following the 2010 elections. But in 1998, Republicans impeached President Clinton during such a post-election congressional session. Conservatives fearmonger about supposedly unprecedented use of lame duck session to address “controversial” issues Gingrich: “[A]ny attempt by the outgoing Congress to pass legislation they were unwilling to defend in an election would be an attempt to thwart the will of the people.” Writing in Human Events on August 4, Newt Gingrich wrote that “Democratic leaders today have been sending clear signals that they are willing to use the lame duck session of Congress to pass the most unpopular and destructive parts of their agenda,” and that, “Like the Federalists’ actions in 1801, any attempt by the outgoing Congress to pass legislation they were unwilling to defend in an election would be an attempt to thwart the will of the people.” Gingrich continued, “It is hard to think of an attitude more fundamentally at odds with the spirit of our democratic republic than the idea that an elected representative should feel ‘liberated’ to pass bills the American people do not support once he or she is freed from the burden of having to face the voters.” Gingrich urged his readers to asked their members of Congress to sign a pledge not to participate in such a lame duck session because it “smacks of the worst kind of political corruption” and “is an abusive power grab.” Rove: “We’ve never had a lame duck session that has dealt with a highly controversial and extremely consequential item.” Appearing on the August 9 edition of Fox News’ Your World With Neil Cavuto , Karl Rove said that “we’ve never had a lame-duck session that has dealt with a highly controversial and extremely consequential item,” adding that it “would really be unusual” for Democrats to deal with issues like cap and trade, card check and tax cuts during the session. Fund: “It’s been almost 30 years since anything remotely contentious was handled in a lame-duck session.” In a July 9 Wall Street Journal column, John Fund wrote , “It’s been almost 30 years since anything remotely contentious was handled in a lame-duck session, but that doesn’t faze Democrats who have jammed through ObamaCare and are determined to bring the financial system under greater federal control.” Geraghty: “Lame-duck sessions are not designed to be shortcuts to ignore the will of the people and erase any sense of legislative culpability.” Jim Geraghty wrote in National Review Online’s “Campaign Spot” blog on June 16 that “Every Republican challenger ought to be demanding that their Democrat incumbent opponent pledge in writing that they will not pass an energy bill in a lame-duck session if they are defeated” and that “When the people make their opinion clear, fundamental concepts of accountability and responsibility require that the opinion not be ignored.” Geragthy added, “Lame-duck sessions are not designed to be shortcuts to ignore the will of the people and erase any sense of legislative culpability.” Beck: Democrats “ramping up civil unrest” with lame duck session. On the July 15 edition of his radio show, Glenn Beck discussed the proposed lame duck session with Rep. Michelle Bachmann (D-MN) and said, “[Y]ou tell me what stops these people. Because this is my real fear. They are ramping up civil unrest.” Read on… And we can now add Thiessen here. THIESSEN: If I’m thankful for anything this Thanksgiving I’m thankful for the America people for electing this Congress. The American people just fired this Congress. This was the largest shift in seats since 1948. What that means is there has not been a lame duck Congress that has been more discredited in more than six decades. They have no legitimacy. They should not be doing anything of substance. The only thing they should be doing is keeping the doors of government open while they pack their bags and prepare their resumes and let anything that of substance be taken care of by the new Congress that’s coming in that was just elected by the American people. They should not be tackling any controversial issues or doing anything other than keeping the government working. Well, I think if you look at the… what is the job of Congress? The job of Congress, Congress has about the Constitution the power of the purse. Their job is to pass spending bills. They have not passed a single spending bill as we come up on the last few weeks of this session. So they have not done their job. What they did for the last two years was focus on a government take over of health care, government take over of the banks and all of the other things that led the American people to fire them and so if they go into this lame duck session saying hey, let’s take on Don’t Ask Don’t Tell, let’s take on an arms control treaty with Russia, let’s change the tax structure of this country, they have no legitimacy to do any of that. So they need to focus on keeping the doors of government open. Thiessen acts like the Democrats lost the Senate as well. I’ll give the Republicans credit for one thing, they’ve got their lies and they’re sticking to them dammit. And the media is happy to let them repeat them over, and over and over again.
Continue reading …Some records are made to be broken, from the 100-meter dash to Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest. But who would encharge themselves to break the nine years, fifty days Soviet record for “most time occupying Afghanistan?” And the winner is… the United States of America. —JCL The LA Times: As wartime days go, Friday was a fairly quiet one in Afghanistan. Helicopters skittered across the sky; convoys rumbled along desert roads; soldiers in mountain outposts scanned the jagged peaks around them. But one thing set the day apart: With its passing, the length of the U.S. military’s campaign in Afghanistan matched that of the Soviet Union’s long and demoralizing sojourn in the nation. The last Red Army troops left Feb. 15, 1989, driven out after nine years and 50 days by the U.S.-backed Afghan fighters known as mujahedin, or holy warriors. Ragtag yet ferocious, they were so spectrally elusive that the Soviet forces called them dukhi, or ghosts. A fitting term, perhaps, for a country that has been called “the graveyard of empires.” Read more Related Entries November 26, 2010 ‘Left, Right & Center’: Korean Clash, Taliban Scam November 24, 2010 More News, Less Turkey
Continue reading …Italy is facing fines from the EU for failing to take out the trash. No, we’re not talking about Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. We’re talking about the tons of garbage that has choked the streets of Naples for years. —JCL The Guardian: Italy has failed to comply with a European court ruling on the chronic Naples waste crisis and could face fines if it does not solve the problem, a top EU official said today. Thousands of tonnes of rubbish still lie uncollected in the streets of Italy’s third-largest city despite weeks of protests by local residents and repeated claims by prime minister Silvio Berlusconi to have fixed the problem. The problem of poor waste management in Italy’s most densely populated region has persisted for years, compounded by disputes between competing local authorities and made worse by organised crime. Read more Related Entries November 26, 2010 ‘Left, Right & Center’: Korean Clash, Taliban Scam November 24, 2010 More News, Less Turkey
Continue reading …Italy has been slapped with a court ruling and could face European Union fines for failing to remove rubbish. No, we’re not talking about prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, but instead of the country’s seemingly chronic inability to clear thousands of tons of trash in Naples. —JCL The Guardian: Italy has failed to comply with a European court ruling on the chronic Naples waste crisis and could face fines if it does not solve the problem, a top EU official said today. Thousands of tonnes of rubbish still lie uncollected in the streets of Italy’s third-largest city despite weeks of protests by local residents and repeated claims by prime minister Silvio Berlusconi to have fixed the problem. The problem of poor waste management in Italy’s most densely populated region has persisted for years, compounded by disputes between competing local authorities and made worse by organised crime. Read more Related Entries November 26, 2010 ‘Left, Right & Center’: Korean Clash, Taliban Scam November 24, 2010 More News, Less Turkey
Continue reading …Click here to view this media So Michael Gerson thinks it’s beyond the pale for liberals to suggest that Republicans might be planning to sabotage the economy in order to win the 2012 elections, as people like Paul Krugman have astutely observed they obviously are doing. According to Gerson, people asserting this are indulging in “conspiracy theories”: Yet this is precisely what the sabotage theorists must deny. They must assert that the case for liberal policies is so self-evident that all opposition is malevolent. But given the recent record of liberal economics, policies that seem self-evident to them now seem questionable to many. Objective conditions call for alternatives. And Republicans are advocating the conservative alternatives – monetary restraint, lower spending, lower taxes – they have embraced for 30 years. Right. Even though liberals don’t to resort to the factless fantasies that are the essence of conspiracy theories, they do happen to believe that the preceding eight years of conservative governance in America drove the country to the brink of economic and political ruin — and their beliefs are very much grounded in real fact. They don’t subscribe to the ongoing fantasy by conservatives that “the conservative alternatives – monetary restraint, lower spending, lower taxes” are any kind of solution, because it’s been definitively proven that they are not. Conservatives, contrary to reality, do. That insistence on living in a fantasy world — which really has come to define conservatism these days — is also what leads conservatives, not liberals, to subscribe to all kinds of conspiracy theories, ranging from Obama’s birth certificate to his supposed plan to grab Americans’ guns to the widespread belief, spread by leading right-wing pundits like Glenn Beck and Sean Hannity, that Obama is secretly a radical black America-hater intent on harming white Americans, Funny that Gerson never seems fit to mention this, eh? Instead, he informs us that serious Beltway Republicans find such talk unacceptable: It is difficult to overstate how offensive elected Republicans find the sabotage accusation, which Obama himself has come very close to making. During the run-up to the midterm election, the president said at a town hall meeting in Racine, Wis.: “Before I was even inaugurated, there were leaders on the other side of the aisle who got together and they made the calculation that if Obama fails, then we win.” Some Republican leaders naturally took this as an attack on their motives. Was the president really contending that Republican representatives want their constituents to be unemployed in order to gain a political benefit for themselves? No charge from the campaign more effectively undermined the possibility of future cooperation. This really is precious. Because Republicans’ desire to do anything — anything, even vote against a fundamentally Republican health-care measure — has led them to simply oppose anything President Obama hopes to achieve. This includes a START treaty that is basic to American security, as well as dealing with the debt limit in a responsible fashion, which Gerson disingenuously depicts as just a matter of conservatives balking at a lack of fiscal conservatism. But this isn’t a surprise to anyone. Republicans aren’t interested in helping Americans as long as Obama is their president. They will only act constructively if they are in charge. As Krugman put it: The fact is that one of our two great political parties has made it clear that it has no interest in making America governable, unless it’s doing the governing. And that party now controls one house of Congress, which means that the country will not, in fact, be governable without that party’s cooperation — cooperation that won’t be forthcoming. This in fact has been the Republican track record of the past two years — particularly as they have come under the thrall of the Tea Partiers. Indeed, Tea Partiers have been explicit about viewing compromise of any kind as betrayal. And Republicans have been explicit from the start — keyed by Rush Limbaugh’s marching orders — about being united on a single front: making Obama fail. That has certainly been the byword at Fox News in the ensuing years. Nor has it been any less so among those congressional Republicans whose tender feelings have now been so easily offended by a little dose of truthfulness they are threatening to take their new government ball and go home. Indeed, they’ve been very explicit about it: Mitch McConnell : “It was absolutely critical that everybody be together because if the proponents of the bill were able to say it was bipartisan, it tended to convey to the public that this is O.K., they must have figured it out,” Mr. McConnell said about the health legislation in an interview, suggesting that even minimal Republican support could sway the public. “It’s either bipartisan or it isn’t.” Jim DeMint : “Senators and Congressmen will come back in September afraid to vote against the American people,” DeMint predicted, adding that “this health care issue Is D-Day for freedom in America.” “If we’re able to stop Obama on this it will be his Waterloo. It will break him.” Since the election, they’ve been even more strident , a la Darrell Issa’s hasty retreat from talk of “compromise”: “You know, the word ‘compromise’ has been misunderstood.” Mitch McConnell : “The single most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president.” John Boehner : “This is not a time for compromise.” Then there was Mike Pence , vowing “no compromise” on CNN. The odd thing about all this is that Gerson insists on calling all this a “conspiracy theory” when in fact all of this is merely a part of the public record, and Republicans have been quite clear — at least, among themselves — that they view obstructing Obama in any and every particular paramount, even at the cost of American economic advancement, which they believe must wait until they are back in charge. Otherwise, Americans might view Obama favorably. This is the opposite of a conspiracy theory, which is always a farrago of paranoid fantasy, conjecture, and half-facts. As Chip Berlet explains : What Richard Hofstadter described as the “paranoid style” in U.S. right-wing movements derives from belief in an apocalyptic struggle between “good” and “evil,” in which demonized enemies are complicit in a vast insidious plot against the common good, and against which the conspiracist must heroically sound the alarm. …. Conspiracism is neither a healthy expression of skepticism nor a valid form of criticism; rather it is a belief system that refuses to obey the rules of logic. These theories operate from a pre-existing premise of a conspiracy based upon careless collection of facts and flawed assumptions. What constitutes “proof” for a conspiracist is often more accurately described as circumstance, rumor, and hearsay; and the allegations often use the tools of fear—dualism, demonization, scapegoating, and aggressively apocalyptic stories—which all too often are commandeered by demagogues. Gerson is looking for conspiracy theories in all the wrong places, methinks. Meanwhile, both Greg Sargent and Steve Benen have solid responses to Gerson’s garbage.
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