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By David Sirota What would happen if the criminals who destroyed the economy were thrown in jail—or the electric chair? We’ll never know. Related Entries November 18, 2010 GM’s Big Day November 18, 2010 The Warning Cell Phone Makers Keep Hidden

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Say it Ain’t So

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Did the President really fall for this when the health care debate started? Greg Sargent has more. And so do we . “Waterloo” anybody? If what Obama said is true and they were faked out by Republican obstructionism then David Axelrod should resign. Progressives warned of this tactic even before President Obama took office.

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David Duke’s new role as white moralist kind of conflicts with his horndog past

Click here to view this media My latest post is up at SPLC’s Hatewatch. It’s all about everyone’s favorite white supremacist and how he’s becoming concerned about our morality these days — hahahahaha …. Now that he’s gaining in years, longtime white-supremacy advocate David Duke, who in his youth gained a notorious reputation as a womanizing playboy, is apparently now shifting to a more traditional role of moralizing geezer. Witness his most recent video “lecture,” wherein he lectures his audience (such as it is) on the historical roots of the “sexual revolution” – which, in Duke’s view, is the product of Sigmund Freud’s theories of psychoanalysis, and therefore is yet another civilization-destroying product of product of conniving Jews: Duke: Wherever the globalist media reaches on this planet, there is an ongoing sexual revolution. It should be called sexual dehumanization. In traditional Western culture, sex is idealized and embedded with the idea of family and children and the deep and sacred respect for the love between a man and a woman, and marriage as a beautiful, even holy, institution. A perfect example of the veneration of womanhood, fidelity and purity, as expressed in countless artworks, is the Virgin Mary. The Madonna is also venerated in the Muslim Koran, which defends Mary from the Jewish Talmudic slanders that claim Mary was a whore and Jesus a bastard. I hate to quote those words. Today the name Madonna fits the Talmudic slander. It’s the image of a degenerate superstar whore, engaging in gang sex and mocking the crucifixion. The latest media-promoted female phenom is Lady Gaga, and this teen idol is also depicted engaging in gang sex, sadism, masochism, and other forms of degeneracy, along with her trendy music. Now this is the hottest new star promoted by the Jewish controlled globalist media, including MTV – Sumner Redstone. Real name: Rothstein. The media of the Western world, and thus of the whole globe, has become a weapon of mass destruction of the highest in human values. The human cost has been enormous. Hundreds of millions of families have been destroyed. Children now commonly grow up without fathers. Sexually rooted epidemics, including STDs, hepatitis and HPV are now soaring. AIDS, a disease primarily of promiscuity, will cost hundreds of millions of lives. Millions of people have suffered sterility, and will never know the joy of children. Child rape, molestation, and abuse has grown exponentially. Nevermind the hypocrisy of the nation’s foremost practitioner of racial and ethnic dehumanization lecturing us about “sexual dehumanization.” What’s agonizingly hilarious about this diatribe is how starkly Duke’s new moral ethos contrasts with his own personal behavior over the years. Read the rest here.

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Excellent news. I cannot think of anyone who will be more capable of keeping Darrell Issa in check than Dennis Kucinich. His challenge to Towns is one worth supporting. As it stands right now, it looks like the Dems are in lockstep behind Towns, which I view as an error we will all come to deeply regret. From Rep. Kucinich’s letter to Dems : cannot simply stand by idly and hope that such a reckless approach to the use of the power of the Chair will not happen, especially since it is not only being promised, but demonstrated by the person who will hold the gavel. It is a matter of the highest importance that any intemperate use of the power of the Chair be challenged at every turn. Accordingly, I have decided to step forward as a candidate for Ranking Member of the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. In that capacity, here is my pledge to you and our fellow members of the House: 1. Zero tolerance for smears and innuendo. Every single statement by Chairman Issa which is lacking in respect for the process of oversight, every unsubstantiated allegation or any publically pronounced assumption which lacks basic fairness will be promptly challenged. 2. I will encourage a team approach on the Committee which will tap the talents of all members to actively participate in responding to any abuse of process. 3. All members will receive weekly updates of oversight activities to be able to provide input. 4. Cooperation with Chairman Issa when, and only when, he proceeds in an even-handed manner which demonstrates basic fairness and respect for due process. Via Dennis G at Balloon Juice : The truth is that Towns is not a fighter and we need a fighter as the Ranking Democrat on the Committee. He is a guy with a safe seat who is willing to try and find common ground with everybody. He has run the Committee with the assumption that everybody on it views the responsibilities of Oversight the way he views them. He could not be more mistaken. His response to Issa’s plans to use control of the powerful committee for partisan witch hunts has been merely to say that “…any attempt to use this committee as a political weapon are intolerable and he will lead a strong and unified resistance against any such effort.” Really? Seriously? Please Congressman Towns—be truthful—can you think of a single Republican who will take a stand against Issa? Could you name any Republican in Congress who would stand united with you to fight Issa’s planned use of the Committee as a “political weapon”? Any Republican on the Committee? Crickets. Just who will constitute this “unified resistance” that Towns speaks about? Sadly, he just screams weakness. Truth be told, Issa and the Republicans have already drunk his milkshake. As Ranking member of the Oversight Committee, Towns only offers impotent rage at the abuses that led to his pre-surrender before Issa’s campaign of orchestrated abuse even gets off the ground. Somehow, I think we could do better. Yes we can. Kucinich is at his very best when he is standing up for what’s right, just like when he introduced 35 articles of impeachment against Dick Cheney . I can’t think of anyone I’d trust more to keep an eye on Issa and his gang of merry men. This is no time for Democrats to pretend there’s going to be nice-nice bipartisanship and polite discourse, especially in that committee. Maybe they didn’t have their listening ears on when Issa promised 40 weeks of investigations. Maybe they just forgot the nasty, underhanded suggestion that the Recovery Act was Obama’s “walking-around money”. Maybe they’re just more naive than even I am. Whatever the case, I suggest we get behind Kucinich on this effort and push for a real fighter to be the ranking Dem on that committee.

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Citizens, do your part . Die! Senators Jack Reed (D-RI) and Bob Casey (D-PA) want the Senate to take up and pass a one-year extension of unemployment insurance benefits from 26 to 99 weeks, but they did not sound hopeful on a conference call that this could get done before the extension lapses at the end of November. Getting jobless benefits passed in the lame duck session is going to be a tough road. Congress has always passed emergency funding for extended unemployment benefits in a time of high joblessness, any time the topline rate is over 7.2%. But even with 59 votes, the Senate has faced an arduous series of votes to extend it out month by month this year. The last attempt in April needed multiple cloture votes, with several failing before the final success. At the time, Republicans like Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins said that would be the last extension they would vote for that wasn’t offset with some other revenue or spending cut. Ben Nelson (D-NE) has joined them, making it virtually impossible to find the votes. Adding to this is the fact that the House and Senate will not be in session at all next week, meaning the deadline for getting this passed without a lapse in benefits for the jobless is Friday . Sen. Reed said that with respect to any vote on this, “at this point it’s not been scheduled… I can’t point to a specific time it would come up for a vote this week.” Two million Americans could lose their benefits by the end of the year if this doesn’t get extended, according to the National Employment Law Project. And after that, with an incoming Republican House and more Republicans in the Senate, it would seem virtually impossible to get UI benefits passed. At the same time as this is happening, Republicans want to extend the high-end Bush tax cuts, at a cost of $700 billion dollars, without paying for them. So they want to allow tax cuts with little stimulative effect to go unpaid, and then insist on paying for UI extensions with major stimulative effect. “It’s like someone on a diet who orders a Diet Coke and a Big Mac simultaneously,” Reed said. “Republicans are trying to rewrite economics and reality.” Extending unemployment benefits gets money into the hands of people who need to spend it, while tax cuts for the rich often lies fallow. Economists have shown that UI extensions are far more stimulative; one report said that failure to pass an extension would shave 0.5% from GDP growth, and reduce consumer spending.

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Before the midterms, digby wrote this prophetic afterthought at the end of one of her posts: But then these news outlets are all making huge profits from the right wing buy out of our democracy , so maybe it’s just the price of doing business. In this week’s The Nation , there’s a great article about the emergent money-media complex and the impact it has not only on our elections, but on how issues and politicians are presented by the corporate media who stand to gain much from the megabucks spent on elections. To some extent, this is a story as old as the nation itself. Founding father John Jay thought “those who own the country ought to govern it.” The battle to establish a credible system of “one person, one vote” instead of “one dollar, one vote” has been a running theme in American history. The stakes have always been the same: the less democratic our elections, the more corrupt our governance. But the current moment sees the country accelerating toward the edge of a cliff. “We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can’t have both,” observed Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis. America is being put to the Brandeis test: democracy or plutocracy. The money-and-media election complex is creating a radically different electoral landscape than anything Americans have known since the Gilded Age. That landscape is characterized, pundits tell us, by an “enthusiasm gap.” No kidding. Americans are not stupid. They knew their relatively paltry contributions, and even their votes, were unlikely to stop a $4 billion onslaught. To those bankrolling the system, voter cynicism and apathy are welcome. The more that the 2008 surge of youth participation in electoral politics dissipates, the better for them. Their interests are best served by narrowing the range of debate and participation, since that makes it easier to buy the government. As much as commentators like Jon Meacham might want to believe that “we are now living with a political class which has a financial and cultural interest in conflict rather than in governing,” the hard truth is that we have a corporate class that funds electoral conflict for the purpose of forging a political class that will govern in its interest . Our skewed and cynical election process takes a toll on those most committed to those who fight hardest for ethical and open elections. The emerging money-and-media election complex is perfectly designed to make participants conform or suffer the consequences. It should come as no surprise that some of the most troubling results of 2010 involved the defeats of independent players of both parties who had battled hardest for clean politics and ethical government—Wisconsin Senator Russ Feingold, the leading progressive Democratic reformer , was defeated, as was Representative Mike Castle, a moderate Republican beaten in Delaware’s GOP Senate primary by Tea Party heroine Christine O’Donnell. Nor should it get better in 2012. “It’s a bigger prize in 2012, and that’s changing the White House,” says Robert Duncan, chair of American Crossroads. “We’ve planted the flag for permanence, and we believe we will play a major role for 2012.” So this all explains how the money boys targeted key players, but it certainly doesn’t give much credit to the media. From where I sit, the narrative of the midterms was as much about the constant drumbeat of the “depressed Democrat” and the Tea Party hype as it was anything else, and that came to us courtesy of every single mainstream media player out there. David Gregory does a stellar job of reinforcing right wing memes as though they’re fact every week on Meet the Press. Cable news, with a few notable exceptions, does the same. And if you dare watch the 6 o’clock nightly news on one of the networks, the most you get is a 30-second sound bite with the most sensational presentation of every issue there is. Without question, though, there would be no “Tea Party” and there would be no hype if they hadn’t offered mainstream media two very important items: Sensational clips and a whole lot of money. They know a good thing when they see it. But it’s not just corporations and consultants who are setting the new agenda. The most important yet least-recognized piece of the money-and-media election complex is the commercial broadcasting industry, which just had its best money-making election season ever. Political advertising has become an enormous cash cow for it—roughly two-thirds of the campaign spending this year flowed into the coffers of TV stations; the final figure is likely to be well above $2 billion. Whereas in the 1990s the average commercial TV station received about 3 percent of its revenues from campaign ads, this year campaign money could account for as much as 20 percent. And station owners are not missing a beat; thirty-second spots that went for $2,000 in 2008 were jacked up to $5,000 this year, according to the Los Angeles Times. Much of this money will go to stations owned by a handful of Fortune 500 firms. No wonder station owners oppose campaign finance reform; their lobby role in Washington is similar to the NRA’s in battling bans on assault weapons. Here’s where it cuts across journalism’s turf: The journalists who want to cut through the lies are having a harder time doing so. One of the truly unsettling developments of this election season was the decision by prominent candidates either to avoid the press, as Nevada Senate candidate Sharron Angle did, or to refuse opportunities to debate. Once upon a time challengers hungered to debate incumbents; in 2010 incumbents like Florida Representative Alan Grayson found themselves chasing after well-funded challengers. Feingold offered to debate his millionaire opponent in forums across the state, but Republican Ron Johnson, who had no record in public life and who even avoided interviews with newspaper editorial boards, refused. There are solutions, ones that might not even need a recalcitrant Congress. As the authors point out, the FCC should be looking at the money spent and whose pockets it went to. We have to stop thinking about the crisis of our politics merely in terms of reforming the campaign finance system (though of course it’s important to fight for reforms). It’s a media ownership and responsibility issue as well. It goes to the heart of why freedom of the press is enshrined in our Constitution. And regulatory agencies that are empowered to protect the public interest should be the first to intervene. This really IS a crisis. We can’t rely on the Supreme Court to fix what they tore asunder. The best, fastest route is via regulatory agencies, a tool the Obama administration has been using under the radar. (See this list of FTC actions for some examples). In the words of Nancy Pelosi…. We will go through the gate,” she said. “If the gate is closed, we will go over the fence. If the fence is too high, we will pole-vault in. We must.

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‘It Gets Worse’ with John and Cindy McCain

Politicians don’t seem to realize, or maybe the word is care , that we have this stuff called advanced technology that records their statements for posterity and endless playback. Jon Stewart’s “Daily Show” crack team of researchers … (continued) Related Entries November 18, 2010 The Day China Diverted the Internet November 18, 2010 Senate May Consider Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell Repeal

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By Ruth Marcus Judging by England’s biggest engagement, relationships have come a long way in the royal family. Related Entries November 18, 2010 The Day China Diverted the Internet November 18, 2010 Senate May Consider Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell Repeal

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Joe Scarborough apparently likes Nancy Pelosi's toughness, given her response to his MSNBC colleague pressing her as to why she would make a good House Minority Leader after losing 60 seats. MSNBC's Luke Russert asked the Speaker why she should lead the House Democrats if her approval rating among independents is at 8 percent. Pelosi delivered a testy response, and Scarborough admitted his glee over the tone. “I think she's a disaster for the Democrats politically right now…but I like that fight,” he remarked. “C'mon, boom!” he expressed as he threw imaginary punches, pretending to be Pelosi punching down Russert. “Hey Luke, come here, Luke, look, boom! Luke, look, look, boom!” Later on Thursday's “Morning Joe,” Scarborough was pressed by Times columnist Andrew Ross Sorkin as to why he was praising such a polarizing figure when he has promoted a platform of bipartisanship and moderate politics. The “Morning Joe” co-host has conducted multiple campaigns on his own show for calmer rhetoric in the country's political sphere and has denounced political extremism.

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Ann Coulter wants Sean Hannity to cut Peter Johnson’s mike

Click here to view this media This exchange among three right-wing Fauxheads — Ann Coulter, who is adamantly opposed to the TSA’s new airport bodyscans (hmmmmmm …. OK, not gonna go there), Peter Johnson, a longtime BushCo apologist who thinks they’re just fine, and Sean Hannity, who just wants to be pals with all things RightWing — really isn’t particularly enlightening. But it sure is entertaining. Especially because Johnson won’t let Coulter get away with her vague platitudes — Coulter, of course, thinks we can just do away with the scans and instead rely on good ol’ American racial profiling, — and so he insists on pointing out that Coulter has no solutions for dealing with the kinds of threats the bodyscans are intended to prevent. (I’m not so sure Johnson is right about the need for the scans, but that doesn’t make Coulter anything other than the dead wrong she usually is.) So Coulter shrieks at him to shut up, when in fact he’s just engaging in the standard Fox-style talk-show behavior, where interruption is the norm. Indeed, Coulter is a past master of this form. Coulter has a history of not handling criticism well — she always wants her critics silenced. I’m surprised she didn’t ask Hannity to beat Johnson up.

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