On Thursday's Parker-Spitzer, CNN's Kathleen Parker bizarrely and inaccurately claimed that Alexander Hamilton came to the United States illegally and drafted the Constitution: “Let's remember… a lot of Americans did come through the back door such as Alexander Hamilton. He got off the boat from the West Indies, and all he did was write the Constitution and become the first Secretary of the Treasury .” Parker raised this false history during a discussion of Pedro Ramirez, Fresno State University's student body president, who was outed as an illegal immigrant by a student newspaper . After playing clips from Ramirez and his opponent during the student election, who is also the president of the Fresno State College Republicans, the CNN host displayed sympathy for the college student: “This is kind of a classic though, isn't it, really? I mean, you've the college Republican versus the illegal immigrant, and it's kind of a classic clash, you know, that corresponds to this immigration debate we're having in this country. And clearly, when you put a human face on the illegal immigrant, it's a different story. I mean, nobody wants to punish this young 22-year-old .” [ Video embedded below the page break ] read more
Continue reading …Mining issues are again in the news, as 27 miners have been declared missing after a destructive explosion in New Zealand’s South Island, jogging our collective memory of the toils that followed the Chilean miners who were trapped underneath the ground for 69 days. —JCL The BBC: Twenty-seven miners are missing after an explosion at a remote coal mine on New Zealand’s South Island. The mayor of Greymouth, 46km (29 miles) south-west of the Pike River mine, said the situation was “pretty serious” but that rescuers were on hand. However, concerns about the possibility of another explosion have delayed attempts to enter the mineshaft. Read more Related Entries November 18, 2010 Look Who’s the Decider Now November 18, 2010 To Deter Crime, Get Tough on Wall Street
Continue reading …Spanish officials have criticized a Catalan campaign video where a woman becomes flush and simulates an orgasm as she casts her vote, claiming the advertisement to be “misleading” and ultimately disrespectful to women. One wonders if the excoriating politicians were actually concerned with the protocols of feminist egalitarianism or if they plain didn’t trust themselves to actually get voters off. —JCL The BBC: Spanish politicians have criticised a video by the Young Socialists in Catalonia in which a woman simulates an orgasm while casting her vote. Both Socialist and opposition politicians have attacked the campaign video. The equality minister called it “misleading” advertising. Read more Related Entries November 18, 2010 Look Who’s the Decider Now November 18, 2010 To Deter Crime, Get Tough on Wall Street
Continue reading …This is from Adam Bink at Open Left. I also spoke to someone last night who said Ensign was expected to be the final vote on the repeal. I was told that the White House took a very strong role in the past two days in pushing to get the DADT repeal across the finish line: According to various sources, Sens. Ensign and Murkowski, of all people, announced they would support cloture on and vote for defense authorization bill with repeal of DADT attached to it. According to an interview with a local Alaska reporter, who then appeared on CNN to share the news, Murkowski said she would not vote against a bill that had repeal in it. At the same time, Sen. Ensign’s staff met local LGBT organizations and an out LGBT elected official in Nevada and told them the Senator supported repeal of DADT and would also vote for cloture, and support passage of, the NDAA . Via press release from Stonewall Dems of Las Vegas: Las Vegas, NV — This afternoon US Senator John Ensign’s (R-NV) Regional Representative Margot Allen told a group of local LGBTQ activists and veterans Senator Ensign will vote to pass the National Defense Authorization Act with the repeal of the discriminatory “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy, that bans gays from serving openly in the military. Led by Nevada State Senator David Parks, a veteran and the state’s first openly gay legislator, Ms. Allen was pointedly asked several times if Senator Ensign supported the repeal and she said under no uncertain terms: Senator John Ensign does not support the Don’t Ask Don’t Tell policy and will vote to repeal it . Ms. Allen explained that after the Pentagon releases the findings of its study on the effects of repealing the ban, he will vote “YES” to pass the National Defense Authorization Act with the repeal included. Ms. Allen also stated that any news reports citing Senator Ensign as against the repeal were false.
Continue reading …Funniest. Takedown. Evah. Jon Stewart ridicules Glenn Beck for his obscene smear of George Soros. Of particular note is the way Stewart turns the blackboard back on Beck and Fox News; it’s actually all quite accurate. There’s a lot here to like, but my favorite part of this is actually the sequence of truncated Beck quotes describing himself in unflattering terms — all, of course, taken absurdly out of context. Talk about being hoist on one’s own petard. Then there’s this: Stewart: Surgery. Ass surgery. [pause] To remove … a fissure? Hemorrhoid? Or perhaps to insert the powerful right forearm of a Hungarian dictator.
Continue reading …Alan Grayson always tells it like it is. The rich do not trickle their Bush tax cuts down to employees. They put the money into villas and Mercedes Benz E-Class cars and bottles of Chateau D’Yquem wine. Alan Grayson (D-Florida) wants everyone to know that he is not in favor of extending the Bush cuts for the wealthy, which would average out to about $83,347 a year for each person in the top 1 percent of the U.S. income bracket. To drive his point home, he made a list for lawmakers on the House floor Wednesday night of the many ways those “high and mighty” individuals making an average of $1.4 million a year will be able to use that extra cash. “Here’s one possibility: they can buy an $83,000 Mercedes Benz E-Class car, not just once, but every single year for the next decade,” he said. “And each year, when they get tired of their brand new Mercedes Benz E-Class car, they can just give it to somebody ’cause they can afford another one. They can give it to a spouse, a sister, a son, a daughter — anybody. Every single year for the next 10 years, the Republican tax plan is to give millionaires enough money for a Mercedes Benz.” Other things rich people can buy with those tax cuts, Grayson said, include a $64,000 Hermés bag, a bottle of Chateau D’Yquem wine from 1787, 20,000 jars of “their favorite mustard” Grey Poupon, and 800 luxury cigars, each of which they could light with a $100 bill.
Continue reading …Former ABC reporter Jami Floyd appeared on MSNBC, Friday, and slammed Sarah Palin as an “extraordinary ass.” Floyd's attack didn't register much of a shock with Jansing and Co. host Chris Jansing. She simply wondered if the profanity was “allowed” in the morning hours.
Continue reading …This business of speculating about what the President or Congress or the Democrats or Progressives must do to regain lost ground seems to be spinning wheels. There are a lot of reasons why Democrats lost the House in the midterms. Some of them have to do with the never-ending spin machine; others with disappointment at how some of the major policy sausage was made; still others with disillusionment and disconnection in general. Howie Klein pointed me over to this article at The Nation by Danny Goldberg, chairman/CEO of Artemis Records and a board member of Rock the Vote. It struck home with me, and I think it will with you, too, no matter what your opinion of our current political dilemma is. Key quotes: Almost half of the public is either misinformed or subject to unanswered right wing narratives. If I believed that there was a chance of Sharia law being imposed in the United States I too would be gravely concerned. If I believed that most Europeans and Canadians had inferior health care to that of average Americans, I too would be against health care reform. If I believed that man-made global warning did not exist or that there were nothing we could do about it and that environmental efforts were responsible for unemployment I’d be against cap and trade. Unless and until progressives change the mind sets of the tens of millions of people who believe right-wing mythology, who never read the New York Times or listen to NPR, who never watch any TV news other than Fox, future elections will have disappointing results for progressives regardless of who is in the White House. To which my first reaction was…easier said than done. But Goldberg doesn’t stop with that indictment. He very clearly articulates solutions, including this one: Since Obama’s election, many pundits have quoted Franklin D. Roosevelt’s injunction of “make me do it” to labor leaders who came to The White House in the nineteen-thirties with an agenda. The way to “make” elected officials do things, is not simply to beat up on the administration but to change and mobilize public opinion. Go read it. It’s inspiring.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media As Ronald Reagan’s budget chief almost thirty years ago, a frustrated David Stockman famously lamented that when it comes to spending discipline, “there are no real conservatives in Congress.” Now, three decades after he concluded “the supply-siders have gone too far,” Stockman called the Republican demand for another $700 billion tax cut windfall for the wealthy , “unconscionable.” As well he should. With the new GOP majority’s financial toxic brew of gargantuan tax giveaways and still unnamed spending cuts, the Free Lunch Party has returned. In truth, it never really left. As Stockman experienced first-hand, the national debt tripled under Ronald Reagan . The Gipper’s M.C. Escher-like pledge to slash taxes, raise defense spending and balance the budget produced a torrent of red in that exceeded that of the previous 200 plus years of American history combined. But conservative propagandists soon forgot Stockman’s ” magic asterisk ” and Reagan’s subsequent tax increases, neither of which could stop the record budget deficits he produced. After the Clinton balanced budget hiatus in the 1990′s, George W. Bush doubled the national debt yet again. As explained in ” The Bush Tax Cuts in Pictures ,” President Bush’s Free Lunch dream predictably turned into a budgetary nightmare: The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities demolished the mythology promoted by President Bush (“You cut taxes and the tax revenues increase”) and the usual suspects on the right. CBPP found that Bush tax cuts accounted for almost half of the mushrooming deficits during his tenure. And as another recent CBPP analysis revealed, over the next 10 years, the Bush tax cuts if made permanent will contribute more to the U.S. budget deficit than the Obama stimulus, the TARP program, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and revenue lost to the recession put together. (Worse still, the Bush tax cuts also coincided with an increase in poverty and a decline in Americans’ average household income .) And now, at a time of record budget deficits and record income inequality , Speaker Boehner and Minority Leader McConnell want to make the expiring Bush tax cuts permanent . The leading lights of the GOP still insist that draining $4 trillion from the U.S. Treasury over the next 10 years (including that $700 billion payday for the richest 2%) doesn’t cost a cent. For his part, this summer John Boehner wrongly claimed, “It’s not the marginal tax rates … that’s not what led to the budget deficit.” In July, Jon Kyl (R-AZ) the second ranking Senate Republican made the same point another way, telling Chris Wallace of Fox News, “You should never have to offset cost of a deliberate decision to reduce tax rates on Americans.” Aborted Obama Commerce nominee Judd Gregg (R-NH) soon chimed in, declaring “I tend to think that tax cuts should not have to be offset.” For his part, Oklahoma’s Tom Coburn argued his math will work in the future if you ignore the past, “Continuing the [Bush] tax cuts isn’t a cost, if you added new taxes, new tax cuts, I would agree that’s a cost.” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell explained how tax cuts magically turn red ink black: “There’s no evidence whatsoever that the Bush tax cuts actually diminished revenue. They increased revenue because of the vibrancy of these tax cuts in the economy. So I think what Senator Kyl was expressing was the view of virtually every Republican on that subject.” Which is sadly right. The supply-side snake oil has been Republican orthodoxy ever since Jude Wanniski first sketched Arthur’s Laffer’s curve on a cocktail napkin. In February 2009, Texas Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison offered the purest expression of the tried and untrue Republican gambit: “I think we get revenue the way we’ve done it in the past that has been so successful in the past and that is tax cuts…Every major tax cut we’ve had in history has created more revenue.” In October, now Senator-elect from Kentucky Rand Paul summed up the new fuzzy math of the Free Lunch Party. Regarding that $4 trillion price tag, Paul declared, “I’m not seeing it as a cost to government.” Then again, Rand Paul isn’t talking about any ways to cut federal spending , either. And he has plenty of company among the ranks of the Free Lunch Republicans. Republicans swept to power by promising to cut, in the words of Indiana’s Mike Pence, ” runaway federal spending .” But when it comes to putting taxpayers’ money where their mouths are, Pence, incoming Speaker John Boehner, future Majority Leader Eric Cantor, Michele Bachmann and much of the cowardly GOP’s top-brass refuse to say what budget cuts they will actually make . For months, Republicans have refused to “man up” to the draconian budget cuts their tough-talking campaign pledges would necessarily require. Pressed by NBC’s David Gregory last month, Mike Pence could not “name the painful choice on a program that you’re going to cut.” Asked seven times by Chris Wallace of Fox News, failed GOP California Senate hopeful Carly Fiorina responded only, “you’re asking a typical political question.” Even as he touted the “GOP Pledge to America,” Speaker-to-Be Boehner dodged Wallace as well: “Let’s not get to the potential solutions. Let’s make sure Americans understand how big the problem is. Then we can talk about possible solutions and then work ourselves into those solutions that are doable.” That charade has only continued since the election. Within 24 hours, Cantor , Bachmann and Tennessee’s Marsha Blackburn all did the duck-and-cover on spending cuts. With defense, Social Security and Medicare (not to mention interest on the national debt) off the table, the unexplained GOP pledge to cut $100 billion in “discretionary” spending would necessarily gut the departments of Education, Transportation, Interior, Commerce and Energy by more than 20%. Which is why, as Politico reported Wednesday, the prospect of serving on the House Appropriations Committee scares the bejesus out of the talk-talking deficit hawks of the new Republican majority: Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) was asked to be an appropriator and said thanks, but no thanks. Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), a tea party favorite, turned down a shot at Appropriations, which controls all discretionary spending. So did conservatives like Lynn Westmoreland (R-Ga.) and Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), an ambitious newcomer who will lead the influential Republican Study Committee… “Anybody who’s a Republican right now, come June, is going to be accused of hating seniors, hating education, hating children, hating clean air and probably hating the military and farmers, too,” said Jack Kingston (R-Ga.), a fiscal conservative who is lobbying to become chairman of the House Appropriations Committee. “So much of the work is going to be appropriations related. There’s going to be a lot of tough votes. So some people may want to shy away from the committee. I understand it.” That same spinelessness was also display on CNN’s Anderson Cooper 360 earlier this month. Refusing to reveal what Boehner described as “lot of tricks up our sleeves in terms of how we can dent this,” Republicans are now saying they will wait for President Obama’s deficit commission to weigh in. To make that point, Cooper showed a Meet the Press clip of Texas Senator and NRSC head Joh n Cornyn using President Obama as a human shield: DAVID GREGORY: What painful choices to really deal with the deficit, is Social Security on the table? What will Republicans do?? SEN. JOHN CORNYN (R-TX), CHAIR, NATIONAL REPUBLICAN SENATORS: The president has a debt commission that reports December the 1st and I think we’d all like to see what they come back with. And my hope is they’ll come back for the bipartisan solution to the debt and particularly entitlement reform, as you — as you’ve mentioned.? But I – DAVID GREGORY: But wait a minute, conservatives need a — a Democratic president’s debt commission to figure out what it is they’d want to cut? As it turns out, the new Republican majority lacks both courage and a sense of irony. After all, the deficit commission was established by President Obama’s executive order after a bill to create it was filibustered in the Senate by 53-46 . That defeat came only after several Republican Senators voted against the very bill they once supported. As Politics Daily summed it up: This reversal early this year involved six Republican co-sponsors of such a commission who voted against their own Senate bill. The six were McCain, Brownback, Mike Crapo of Idaho, John Ensign of Nevada, Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas and James Inhofe of Oklahoma. McConnell had once supported the idea, but he too voted against it. The bill required an up-or-down vote on the commission recommendations. McConnell and others said they feared the panel might suggest raising taxes. Aside from Paul Ryan (whose plan to privatize Social Security and Medicare made him a GOP pariah during election season), virtually the entire Republican leadership team tried to run out the clock before Election Day without ever detailing the spending cuts they claimed to champion. As for the Tea Party demand for a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution, its followers have made clear that they have no stomach for the cataclysmic cuts to government services needed to get the federal ledger back in the black. If defense, Social Security, Medicare and the required interest on the national debt are untouched, that’s over $2.2 trillion in the so-called lock box. Somehow, Tea Partiers would have to magically cut $1.3 trillion of the remaining $1.6 from President Obama’s proposed budget to break even. As the New York Times described in April, “Tea Party supporters said they did not want to cut Medicare or Social Security — the biggest domestic programs, suggesting instead a focus on ‘waste.’” “That’s a conundrum, isn’t it?” asked Jodine White, 62, of Rocklin, Calif. “I don’t know what to say. Maybe I don’t want smaller government. I guess I want smaller government and my Social Security.” She added, “I didn’t look at it from the perspective of losing things I need. I think I’ve changed my mind.” Ms. White might want to talk to her Tea Party friends and their elected Republicans officials. Because while they refuse to lay out the painful spending cuts they claim to support, the Free Lunchers want to continue to reduce taxes even as the combined level of federal, state and local taxes is at its lowest level since 1950 . And not just income taxes. Despite the fact that less than one-quarter of one percent pay it, Republicans want to kill the estate tax (and the $25 billion in revenue it generates annually) once and for all. Ditto the capital gains tax, which the likes of Newt Gingrich want to see rounded down from its current 15% to nothing. As Gingrich put it: “China has zero capital gains. Can you imagine how many factories we’d build if we had zero capital gains?” As for corporate taxes , which have declined relatively as a source of revenue for the United States, Gingrich like other Republicans wants to slash the rate from 35% to the Irish level of 12.5. The cost to the Treasury? $2.1 trillion over 10 years. And so it goes. If this – dangerously irresponsible tax cuts coupled with the cowardly refusal to detail spending reductions – all sounds familiar, it should. Or at least it does to David Stockman . In July, he wrote in a New York Times op-ed , “If there were such a thing as Chapter 11 for politicians, the Republican push to extend the unaffordable Bush tax cuts would amount to a bankruptcy filing.” Or, as he summarized the devastating impact of the Republican Free Lunch Party in the Times print edition, “How my G.O.P. destroyed the U.S. economy.” (This piece also appears at Perrspectives. )
Continue reading …Very unusually, CBS’s Katie Couric promised a look Thursday night at “how runaway government spending has exploded the national debt,” but between that segment and her show’s lead story, an “exclusive” interview with debt commission co-chairmen Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson, Couric illustrated how she and the media are an impediment to rational spending decisions since they paint any decision to not spend more in terms of how that will hurt people. To wit, she despaired:
Continue reading …