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The Tea Party Nation, via Judson Phillips, has laid down a set of ultimatums for the new Republican Congress, and all I can say to them is “good luck with that.” In a very long screed to Senator Mitch McConnell and Speaker-Elect John Boehner, Phillips lays out what they expect this Congress to accomplish in the next two years. Here’s a list, in their own words: “[W]e want Obamacare defunded. There is no compromise on this issue and it is not negotiable.” “[W]e want serious reductions in spending.” (No suggestions for what should be reduced, however. Philips instead falls back on the “waste, fraud and abuse” standby) “[W]e must dismantle the liberal-political complex.” He goes on to name ACORN and Planned Parenthood as agencies receiving Federal funding which should immediately be defunded and left for dead, as if one of them already hasn’t. “[I]f the debt ceiling is to be raised, this is the last time.” Interesting to me that they’d concede this. It may be the most significant “demand” on the list. “[T]axes must be reduced. The Bush tax cuts must be extended for everyone, made permanent…” He goes on to blather about how “small businesses” are being penalized. Small businesses like those holding companies pouring billions into Charles and David Koch’s pockets? Those small businesses? “[T]here can be no amnesty.” A call to oppose the DREAM act and “any other effort.” They seriously want to toss every immigrant out and let them all re-apply. And I thought I was an idealist. “[F]ight the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. The policy has worked well for the last fifteen years. There is no reason to change.” He goes on to rail against “radical leftist groups” wanting to weaken the United States military but fails to acknowledge the near-unanimous opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff that the DADT policy actually undermines the military far more. And I simply must quote Mr. Phillips’ closing because it is so stunningly narrow-minded and insular: We, the members of the mainstream Tea Party movement have a lot of expectations for you in this Congress. We realize the limitations you face. But we also realize the tools you have at your disposal. America is a conservative country. We expect conservative leadership from our country. It’s going to be a very interesting 2 years. I can hardly wait to see how wingers like Phillips handle the disappointment they’re sure to feel when none of this happens.

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Bill O’Reilly and Glenn Beck are confused by Jimmy Carter’s claims that Fox distorts the news: Who, us?

Click here to view this media Bill O’Reilly really hates it when people call out Fox News for being the compulsively mendacious and congenitally vicious propaganda organ it’s become. The other day on his Fox show, he and Glenn Beck puzzled over why Jimmy Carter would go on CNN and say this : The talk shows with Glenn Beck and others on Fox News, I think, have deliberately distorted the news and it’s become highly competitive. And I have, my Republican friends say that MSNBC might be just as biased on the other side in supporting the Democratic Party, the liberal element. This had O’Reilly and Beck rubbing their double chins : O’REILLY: Right. But it’s not the first time that he’s done this, all right, that intentionally distort the news. What is he talking about? Do you know? BECK: No, I have no idea what he’s talking about. I mean, look, Bill, have you ever made mistakes on the air? O’REILLY: Yes. BECK: You correct them? O’REILLY: Shirley Sherrod. BECK: Yes. O’REILLY: I made a mistake. In fact, it’s interesting. I mentioned this earlier. O’REILLY: No, I made the mistake. I didn’t check it out. BECK: I know that. But so did the White House. (CROSSTALK) O’REILLY: Don’t point to other bad behavior to excuse your own. I didn’t use the Mrs. Bush sound bite on Sarah Palin tonight… BECK: Yes. O’REILLY: …because I don’t know what context that’s in. I learned my lesson on Shirley Sherrod. You made a couple of mistakes. Van Jones, you said he was a convicted felon. But you corrected it? BECK: As soon as we found out, I corrected it. O’REILLY: Right. BECK: He’s not — he went to jail but he wasn’t a convicted felon. Where to start? OK, first things first: Beck still has this wrong. Jones was mistakenly arrested and immediately released — he didn’t “go to jail” other than a brief stint in a holding cell. Indeed, his whole narrative about Jones taking part in the Rodney King riots was an utter fabrication, as Eva Patterson explained at the time in the HuffPo : This is what really happened. On May 8, 1992, the week AFTER the Rodney King disturbances, I sent a staff attorney and Van out to be legal monitors at a peaceful march in San Francisco. The local police, perhaps understandably nervous, stopped the march and arrested hundreds of people — including all the legal monitors. The matter was quickly sorted out; Van and my staff attorney were released within a few hours. All charges against them were dropped. Van was part of a successful class action lawsuit later; the City of San Francisco ultimately compensated him financially for his unjust arrest (a rare outcome). So the unwarranted arrest at a peaceful march — for which the charges were dropped and for which Van was financially compensated — is the sole basis for the smear that he is some kind of dangerous criminal. Note that this was pointed out to Beck in August 2009. Media Matters pointed it out too, and did so repeatedly. We pointed it out in October. Yet it was actually four whole months after he first said it that he finally corrected it. Four months was “as soon as” Beck knew about it? Only if his “crack” staff refuses to read its most high-profile public critics — which, truth be told, is conceivable, but unlikely. Not to mention absurdly incompetent. Sometimes I think Beck is so mentally disturbed he genuinely believes the lies he tells. But this performance was something special: Lying about his lies, lying about the corrections to his lies, and lying even in the act of making a correction. That’s what you call the liar’s trifecta. At the time, we pointed out just a few of the corrections Beck could run: — That nefarious Diego Rivera painting in the Rockefeller Center? It was removed on Rockefeller’s orders. (Heck, just watch Cradle Will Rock sometime; the painting figures prominently in the plot.) — Those 1.7 million protesters who showed up for the 9-12 event? Um, dude, it was closer to 60,000 . Little bitta difference there. — Just like Van Jones, Peter Orszag isn’t a “czar.” He passed congressional approval. — UAW workers do not make $154 an hour. — Unions do not, as you’ve claimed, need only 30 percent approval from employees in order to be established. It’s still the usual 51 percent. — Those “doors replaced with stimulus funds? They were hangar doors. And they didn’t cost “$1.4 million.” More like $256,100. Again, bitta difference. — Contrary to your claim that “only 3 percent” of the stimulus plan would be spent in its first year, the actual plan calls for closer to 21 percent of the plan spent in the first seven-and-a-half months alone. — Just because we can breathe it doesn’t disqualify carbon dioxide from consideration as a pollutant — particularly at high levels. You breathe carbon monoxide in nontoxic quantities all the time, too. — Contrary to your sneering claim , Paul Krugman not only didn’t miss the housing bubble, he was one of the few to be warning about it long in advance. That was in October 2009, covering just his first nine months at Fox. Since then, he’s expanded the list exponentially.

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I’m very sorry to hear this . But then, I’m very sorry to hear whenever anyone loses their job, and I’m even sorrier to hear that someone’s unemployment benefits have run out — and that no one seems to give a damn, not enough to do anything about it: Nobody is safe. Velma Hart, who burst onto the media scene after telling President Obama she was scared about her financial future, has been laid off. Hart was let go as the chief financial officer for Am Vets, a nonprofit Maryland-based veteran services organization. Hart has become another casualty of the tough economy in which so many people have lost their jobs. “It’s not anything she did,” said Jim King, the national executive director of Am Vets. “She got bit by the same snake that has bit a lot of people. It was a move to cut our bottom line. Most not-for-profits are seeing their money pinched.” King would not say whether the organization had had other layoffs. “Velma was a good employee,” he said. “It was just a matter of looking at the bottom line and where could we make the best cuts and survive.” King hadn’t seen the irony in Hart being fired just two months after she emotionally told Obama about her fears for her own financial well-being during a town hall meeting in Washington.

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C&L Opening Bell, 11-24-10

enlarge Another day, another round of crappy economic news. Anyone surprised? Let’s git ‘er started! The Fed says we’re going to experience more crappy growth and Top Federal Reserve officials expect the unemployment rate to remain around nine percent at the end of next year and eight percent at the end of 2012, according to internal forecasts that drove the central bank to take new efforts to boost the economy three weeks ago. The 18 top leaders of the central bank expect the U.S. economy to grow at a 3 to 3.6 percent pace next year, which by their calculations will be enough to bring joblessness, currently at 9.6 percent, down to the 8.9 to 9.1 percent range in late 2011. In projections made in June, the same officials had been more optimistic, forecasting 3.5 to 4.2 percent growth in 2011 and an unemployment rate that would decline to the 8.3 to 8.7 percent range. Sadly, my experience with watching forecasts is that they’re rarely gloomy enough. So based on that I’d actually expect unemployment to remain close to double digits well into 2012. How does Obama think he’s going to get reelected with that sort of record on jobs again? One of the most baffling aspects of this administration has been its seeming total obliviousness to the economic fundamentals that drive people to vote in different ways. As in, “When there’s 10% unemployment and a quarter of mortgages are underwater, voters are very likely to vote our sorry butts out of power.” It’s not too hard to understand. Top o’ the mornin’ to ye! Ireland is still an unholy mess! And the International Monetary Fund, which has traditionally done bang-up work in places like Argentina , are urging the Irish to slash its social safety net even more to pay for massive bank bailouts: Ireland should gradually lower unemployment benefits and cut the level of its minimum wage in order to boost employment, the International Monetary Fund said in a paper released on Monday. The paper, approved by Ajai Chopra, the IMF’s mission chief negotiating terms of a joint rescue package with the EU in Dublin, said Ireland should introduce stricter job search requirements, give more resources to unemployment agencies to promote job search assistance, and review the level of minimum wage to make it consistent with a general fall in wages. This sort of report makes me wish that The Leprechaun really existed so he could jump out of the shadows and bite the IMF economists in their faces while saying, “You’ll never give me pot o’ gold to Deutsche Bank, ye scumbag!” Nouriel “Dr. Doom” Roubini is probably right that Greece, Ireland, Portugal and maybe even Spain and Italy might have to leave the Eurozone after they restructure (i.e., default on) their debts: “We started with private debt, we socialized it and it became public debt. Now we have sovereigns in trouble being bailed out by essentially super sovereigns, IMF, euro zone, EU,” Roubini told Reuters Insider. “But there’s not going to be anybody coming from Mars or the moon to bail out the IMF or the euro zone.” Asked if the 16-nation euro zone would eventually disintegrate, with some of the more debt-ridden members dropping out, Roubini, head of RGE Global Economics, said: “Eventually that’s likely, but before some of the weaker members exit the monetary union, the more likely scenario that’s going to affect the markets is a corrosive but orderly restructuring of their public debts.” He said that process would not be painless. “The risk is that you start with one and it unravels,” he warned. The reason the bond vigilantes have been circling Greece, Ireland and the other PIIGS countries is because of the Eurozone’s poorly-designed currency regime. If you can issue your own debt but not your own currency, well, that makes it very tough to devalue your currency to increase your exports’ competitiveness during a brutal recession. It also makes it impossible to monetize your debt (i.e., print a bunch of money and shovel it to your creditors) while implementing austerity measures. Turning back to the States, Greg Sargent reports that some recently-elected Tea Party candidates might actually be working on something useful by eliminating some of the government’s truly wasteful farm subsidies for Ethanol: DeMint and Coburn, two leading conservatives, are calling on fellow Republicans to support letting the subidies expire as a way to prove the GOP is serious about reining in government spending. Just as the battle over earmarks did, ethanol subsidies could put GOP Senators who have supported them in the past — such as Grassley and Orrin Hatch — in an awkward spot, driving a wedge between them and conservatives who want a harder line on spending. Now Grassley has responded to our story, firing off an angry Tweet at DeMint and Coburn, asking them rhetorically if they’re also willing to back the expiration of tax subsidies for the oil and gas industry. Coburn, however, appears ready to accept Grassley’s challenge. With Coburn throwing down the gauntlet and saying not even subsidies for the oil and gas industries should be off the table, it seems like there’s a clear opening here for an unorthodox alliance between conservatives like DeMint and Coburn and green groups who also condemn such subsidies. It’s unclear as of yet how hard DeMint and Coburn will push this crusade, but Coburn in particular does seem pretty serious. Can I just say that if Coburn and DeMint are really, truly serious about this that they deserve a round of applause? One of the hallmarks of the Banana Republicanism that ran our country into the ground over the past decade was the horrifying way the GOP let Corporate America use the federal government as its personal ATM machine. I’ll be watching closely to see if they stick to their promises, but if they follow through they deserve a thumbs-up. Media Matters has a pretty hilarious rundown of various Fox News personalities attacking Warren Buffett for daring to suggest that the richest people in America should pay more in taxes. My favorite reaction was Greta’s: I always thought it was sort of appalling when they said to the rich, ‘the rich need to pay their fair share,’ as though they weren’t paying their fair share — although maybe Warren Buffett isn’t paying his fair share — that it was designed to create class warfare. I do love this sort of construction. “Class warfare,” you’ll notice, is always seemingly waged by the poor and middle class against the wealthy. Rich people would never, ever dream of waging class warfare themselves by, say, clamoring for more tax cuts while demanding cuts to Social Security and Medicare. And finally, your Daily Doom Index : – Ten-year treasury yields closed up by 1.46% – Gold futures finished up 1.5% on the day and closed at $1,377.60. You gold bugs are going to feel really, really foolish paying that much for gold if the world doesn’t end. Unfortunately, I’m somewhat reluctant to take the other side of the bet you’re making… – Bonus doom metric : The North Koreans are acting like a-holes yet again. That makes the world feel a little more doom-ier than most days.

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Daily Kos: Tea Parties Much Like Texans Who Cheered JFK’s Assassination in 1963

The Daily Kos could not let the anniversary of President Kennedy's assassination pass without making comparisons between the “far right” greeting JFK received in Dallas in 1963 and the greeting President Obama receives from the Tea Parties today. The blogger with the handle “Devtob” claimed some Texans cheered the death of Obama in the “nut country,” and presumes today's Texans would cheer Obama's death: Dallas was also the site, in 1961, of the National Indignation Convention, which Rick Perlstein relates to the tea partiers of today : Thousands of delegates from 90 cities packed a National Indignation Convention in Dallas, a 1961 version of today's tea parties; a keynote speaker turned to the master of ceremonies after his introduction and remarked as the audience roared: “Tom Anderson here has turned moderate! All he wants to do is impeach (Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl) Warren. I'm for hanging him!” read more

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‘Simpsons’ has Fox News ‘#1 with racists’

Click here to view this media From David’s earlier post at Crooks and Liars, here is the Simpsons’ scene that got Bill O’Reilly’s knickers in a knot.

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Fail and Grow Rich on Wall Street

By Robert Scheer Welcome to the brave new world of post-bailout capitalism. The Commerce Department announced Tuesday that corporate profits are at their highest level in U.S. history, and the Fed released minutes of an early November meeting in which officials predicted a stagnant economy and continued high unemployment.

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More News, Less Turkey

Today on the list: Bribing Israel, the possibilities of precognition, the value of banks (it’s complicated), and the incredible shrinking withdrawal date. 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. Bribing Israel: Enhancing the Swag The breathless will-they-won’t-they coverage wasn’t quite as extreme this time, but there’s still been way more attention paid to the latest U.S. “settlement freeze” offer to Netanyahu than it deserves. The Incredible Shrinking Withdrawal Date Going, going, gone!

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By Ruth Marcus Some of the loudest howls of outrage over the new airport security rules emanate from those who would be quickest to blame the Obama administration for not doing enough to protect us if a bomber did slip through. Related Entries November 22, 2010 Thanksgiving for Nothing November 22, 2010 Power and the Tiny Acts of Rebellion

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Bristol Palin Down and Out

Forgive us this unabashed descent into mass culture, but our long national nightmare is over. Bristol Palin, despite some critics’ allegations of tea party favoritism, did not win on “Dancing With the Stars.” That honor (if it is one) goes to “Dirty Dancing” star Jennifer Grey, because nobody puts Baby in a corner. Related Entries November 22, 2010 President Mama Grizzly? November 19, 2010 Chasers

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