Home » Archives by category » News » Politics (Page 92)
Al Sharpton Begins One Third of His MSNBC Programs Saying ‘Hey, Republicans’

Six weeks into his new job as an MSNBC host, Al Sharpton has made it crystal clear he despises members of the GOP. So far he has begun one third of his shows hatefully saying, “Hey, Republicans” (video follows with transcript and commentary):

Continue reading …
Wall Streeter to Occupiers: Go Back to Work!

enlarge Credit: We Are the 99 Percent As the Occupy Wall Street marches spread across the nation, one thing remains constant: The unbearable arrogance of the Ivory Tower traders and shills. Check out some of the reactions reported around the country. Miami Herald : “I don’t think it’s directed personally at everyone who works down here,” Klingman said. “If they believe everyone down here contributes to policy decisions, it’s a serious misunderstanding.” Another man in a suit yelled at the protesters, “Go back to work!” He declined to be interviewed. Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a billionaire who made his fortune as a corporate executive, has said the demonstrators are making a mistake by targeting Wall Street. “The protesters are protesting against people who make $40- or $50,000 a year and are struggling to make ends meet. That’s the bottom line. Those are the people who work on Wall Street or in the finance sector,” Bloomberg said in a radio interview Friday. Oh, and Andrew Ross Sorkin took a stroll through the protesters with a CEO banker buddy , who asked: “Is this Occupy Wall Street thing a big deal?” the C.E.O. asked me. I didn’t have an answer. “We’re trying to figure out how much we should be worried about all of this,” he continued, clearly concerned. “Is this going to turn into a personal safety problem?” God forbid, Mr. Banker. God forbid that your personal safety should be at risk. God forbid that you should look upon those people with those signs down there and ask whether your hide is toast or tanned. Really? I’ll be the first one to admit that I’ve had reservations about the whole effort, but as time goes on those have been mostly laid to rest. And when I turn and look directly into the face of selfishness and greed like that banker’s, it’s reminiscent of Dickens on one of his worst days. He should count his blessings that these people are committed and determined to remain nonviolent. The arrogance and utter lack of any understanding is amazing. Bloomberg, the unnamed idiot who shouted “Get a job!” at them, as though they have lived all their life to camp out in the middle of Manhattan with no tent or other shelter, and then this banker. What has happened to simple empathy? Lest we think the 1 percent has been humbled and is ready to change, witness this, via Chicagoist : enlarge Yes, those signs were put in the windows of the Chicago Board of Trade. I suppose that’s because they needed their middle fingers to type out trade orders on their Blackberries. Digby’s reaction to Mr. Banker was similar to mine, but more articulate: I love how these Masters of the Universe are shocked that there is growing unrest over their antics. It’s as if they thought they could continue to profit at the expense of the rest of the country even as they whined and blubbered like little babies at the mere suggestion that they might want to cool it a little bit. This behavior has not gone unnoticed. From the beginning, I have been astonished by the inability of these supposedly smart people to see that they needed to rein in their worst impulses , if only to preserve their golden goose, ( I did personally scare one by using the pitchfork metaphor .) But they couldn’t shut up, couldn’t stop publicly justifying their excesses couldn’t refrain from strutting around like a bunch of entitled aristocrats even in the face of widespread suffering. A backlash was inevitable. They should be glad that it’s a bunch of peaceful protesters. They have acted with such arrogant impunity it could have been much worse. Yes, but their attitude still confounds. How can anyone be so tone-deaf? To comfort myself, I pulled out the worn-out Dickens books, and went hunting for my favorite quotes. Here’s one just for Mr. Banker: “Crush humanity out of shape once more, under similar hammers, and it will twist itself into the same tortured forms. Sow the same seeds of rapacious licence and oppression over again, and it will surely yield the same fruit according to its kind.” – A Tale of Two Cities And for Mr. Bloomberg and Mr. Nasty “Get-A-Job” Screamer”, a reminder of their very heavy chains: “I wear the chain I forged in life….I made it link by link, and yard by yard; I girded it on of my own free will, and of my own free will I wore it.” – Marley’s Ghost, A Christmas Carol And for the 99 percent, this: “I see a beautiful city and a brilliant people rising from this abyss, and, in their struggles to be truly free, in their triumphs and defeats, through long years to come, I see the evil of this time and of the previous time of which this is the natural birth, gradually making expiation for itself and wearing out…” – A Tale of Two Cities Despite what their signs say, that 99 percent does have hope. If they didn’t, they wouldn’t bother to paint a sign, tack it to a stick, make their way down to Manhattan or Los Angeles or Boston or Chicago and shake their fist at the arrogance thrust in their faces. They do have hope. May it be realized to its fullest measure.

Continue reading …
Wall Streeter to Occupiers: Go Back to Work!

enlarge Credit: We Are the 99 Percent As the Occupy Wall Street marches spread across the nation, one thing remains constant: The unbearable arrogance of the Ivory Tower traders and shills. Check out some of the reactions reported around the country. Miami Herald : “I don’t think it’s directed personally at everyone who works down here,” Klingman said. “If they believe everyone down here contributes to policy decisions, it’s a serious misunderstanding.” Another man in a suit yelled at the protesters, “Go back to work!” He declined to be interviewed. Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a billionaire who made his fortune as a corporate executive, has said the demonstrators are making a mistake by targeting Wall Street. “The protesters are protesting against people who make $40- or $50,000 a year and are struggling to make ends meet. That’s the bottom line. Those are the people who work on Wall Street or in the finance sector,” Bloomberg said in a radio interview Friday. Oh, and Andrew Ross Sorkin took a stroll through the protesters with a CEO banker buddy , who asked: “Is this Occupy Wall Street thing a big deal?” the C.E.O. asked me. I didn’t have an answer. “We’re trying to figure out how much we should be worried about all of this,” he continued, clearly concerned. “Is this going to turn into a personal safety problem?” God forbid, Mr. Banker. God forbid that your personal safety should be at risk. God forbid that you should look upon those people with those signs down there and ask whether your hide is toast or tanned. Really? I’ll be the first one to admit that I’ve had reservations about the whole effort, but as time goes on those have been mostly laid to rest. And when I turn and look directly into the face of selfishness and greed like that banker’s, it’s reminiscent of Dickens on one of his worst days. He should count his blessings that these people are committed and determined to remain nonviolent. The arrogance and utter lack of any understanding is amazing. Bloomberg, the unnamed idiot who shouted “Get a job!” at them, as though they have lived all their life to camp out in the middle of Manhattan with no tent or other shelter, and then this banker. What has happened to simple empathy? Lest we think the 1 percent has been humbled and is ready to change, witness this, via Chicagoist : enlarge Yes, those signs were put in the windows of the Chicago Board of Trade. I suppose that’s because they needed their middle fingers to type out trade orders on their Blackberries. Digby’s reaction to Mr. Banker was similar to mine, but more articulate: I love how these Masters of the Universe are shocked that there is growing unrest over their antics. It’s as if they thought they could continue to profit at the expense of the rest of the country even as they whined and blubbered like little babies at the mere suggestion that they might want to cool it a little bit. This behavior has not gone unnoticed. From the beginning, I have been astonished by the inability of these supposedly smart people to see that they needed to rein in their worst impulses , if only to preserve their golden goose, ( I did personally scare one by using the pitchfork metaphor .) But they couldn’t shut up, couldn’t stop publicly justifying their excesses couldn’t refrain from strutting around like a bunch of entitled aristocrats even in the face of widespread suffering. A backlash was inevitable. They should be glad that it’s a bunch of peaceful protesters. They have acted with such arrogant impunity it could have been much worse. Yes, but their attitude still confounds. How can anyone be so tone-deaf? To comfort myself, I pulled out the worn-out Dickens books, and went hunting for my favorite quotes. Here’s one just for Mr. Banker: “Crush humanity out of shape once more, under similar hammers, and it will twist itself into the same tortured forms. Sow the same seeds of rapacious licence and oppression over again, and it will surely yield the same fruit according to its kind.” – A Tale of Two Cities And for Mr. Bloomberg and Mr. Nasty “Get-A-Job” Screamer”, a reminder of their very heavy chains: “I wear the chain I forged in life….I made it link by link, and yard by yard; I girded it on of my own free will, and of my own free will I wore it.” – Marley’s Ghost, A Christmas Carol And for the 99 percent, this: “I see a beautiful city and a brilliant people rising from this abyss, and, in their struggles to be truly free, in their triumphs and defeats, through long years to come, I see the evil of this time and of the previous time of which this is the natural birth, gradually making expiation for itself and wearing out…” – A Tale of Two Cities Despite what their signs say, that 99 percent does have hope. If they didn’t, they wouldn’t bother to paint a sign, tack it to a stick, make their way down to Manhattan or Los Angeles or Boston or Chicago and shake their fist at the arrogance thrust in their faces. They do have hope. May it be realized to its fullest measure.

Continue reading …
Occupy Wall Street Teams With Labor Unions for Massive March

Nearly a week ago at Occupy Wall Street’s camp in Lower Manhattan, the head of the movement’s labor working group announced that the protest had received support from the Transit Worker’s Union-Local 100. Today, the TWU and several other unions are joining the protesters for what could be the largest march since the movement began.

Continue reading …

Crossposted from Truth Ticker . A coordinated campaign of liberal callers infiltrating Limbaugh’s show, circumventing the screener, and peppering the host with a wide range of questions that Rush cannot possibly answer adequately (honestly, anyway), seems to be getting under his skin. Today, Limbaugh was tearing into Dick Durbin because the Senator gave a floor speech that suggested Bank of America account holders should close their accounts and bank with some other institution that would not be so quick to nickle and dime them. (BofA just announced that they’d begin charging debit card users a $5 monthly fee). The nut of Limbaugh’s argument was that a United States Senator has no business interfering in the private sector like that. It’s just not the role of elected officials, Rush says. So I called and pretended to be Kevin from Clifton Park, NY. I told Snerdley that Rush can’t have it both ways. If he’s going to condemn Durbin for interfering in private sector markets, then he should equally condemn Republicans for interfering with the market services Planned Parenthood provides. Snerdley liked it and put me on hold. While on hold, I started thinking of other times that Republicans attacked market actors. Like the Dixie Chicks. The New York Times… And then I remembered reading an old story about how Limbaugh came to be carried by the Armed Forces Radio network: Republican Congressman pressured the Pentagon’s brass until they caved. So I waited about an hour, and finally Rush got to my call. This is what I said, but you should really watch the video to get the full context of why this call is so revealing: Me: “Hey Rush, you’ve talked about how Durbin… It’s just not his place as a Senator to get involved. But I’ve heard Republicans get involved in telling women where they can get health care with Planned Parenthood, they said don’t buy Dixie Chicks records, they’ve railed against the New York Times and I know of at least one impotent, pill-popping propagandist on the radio that got his start on the Armed Forces talk radio at the behest of Republican interference. So please don’t tell us that it’s not the place of a politician to talk out…talk out… speak out about issues that are important to millions and millions of people.” Rush: “I don’t know what politician told people not to buy the Dixie Chicks records. What are you talking about? Planned Parenthood? You know… you… again… identify yourself and the way you think as another obstacle all the rest of us face for our freedom… you’re just a glittering jewel of colossal ignorance… you’re an arrogant snob… and arrogant, full-fledged snob and you don’t know 10% of what you think you know… because you’ve been ill-informed, misinformed by a faulty education system or whatever it is. But, people like you… you’re part of the pack we’re gonna hafta run over… you’re just part of the pack we’re gonna look at and smile in the rear-view mirror in 2012. Take care Kevin, have a great day.” The end of this video is the important bit. Rush NEVER loses his cool the way he did with the caller that immediately followed me. Part of his appeal is that he’s not like the “rest of them”. He’ll insult liberals, but you won’t see throbbing veins and spittle flying. He’s never out of control. At least not until today. And today, he took it out on a ditto-head. If you watch the video closely, you can see that he and his producer are messaging back and forth toward the end of my call. When Rush is informed that it’s me – again – the slow boil begins. And oon enough it boils over when the next caller repeatedly mentions Bo Snerdley – Limbaugh’s incompetent screener – that I had just duped… again. I’m still recruiting for more people to join our talk radio disruption crew. Right now we’re taking on Jabba the Rushbo, but once we’re through with him, we’ll turn to the others. These folks got the Fairness Doctrine repealed, but that doesn’t mean we can’t level the playing field. If you want to join us, email me at stark.m AT gmail DOT com.

Continue reading …
Watch: Neutral Milk Hotel’s Jeff Mangum Performs at Occupy Wall Street

The Radiohead rumors may have been a ruse, but in good rock and roll tradition, another artist has joined the ranks of a political protest. Jeff Mangum, former lead singer of Neutral Milk Hotel, delighted Occupy Wall Street demonstrators with a free performance at Zucotti Park Tuesday night. (MORE: Occupy Wall Street Protest Gets Support from

Continue reading …
Sarah Palin will not run for president in 2012

In a letter to supporters, Sarah Palin said: ‘I have decided that I will not be seeking the GOP nomination for president of the US’ Sarah Palin has ended her year-long tease of American conservatives by finally announcing she will not be joining the presidential race. In a letter to supporters, Palin said: “After much prayer and serious consideration, I have decided that I will not be seeking the 2012 GOP nomination for president of the United States. “When we serve, we devote ourselves to God, family and country. My decision maintains this order.” Her departure clarifies the Republican field, with no other candidates likely to join the race at this late stage. The Republican contest is shaping up basically as between former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney and Texas governor Rick Perry, in spite of a recent surge in support for businessman Herman Cain. As well as saying she was putting her family first, she added she could be more effective for the conservative cause in helping getting Tea Party supporters and other rightwingers elected to Congress, governorships and the White House rather than standing herself. She did not need a title to help America recover, she said. “My decision is based upon a review of what commonsense conservatives and independents have accomplished, especially over the last year. I believe that at this time I can be more effective in a decisive role to help elect other true public servants to office – from the nation’s governors to Congressional seats and the presidency.” Still a strong voice in the Tea Party movement, she intends in the coming weeks to co-ordinate strategies to help Republicans retake the White House and Senate next year, and hold its control of the House. Palin has long toyed with the idea of a presidential run but has come up against poor poll ratings. One of the most recent polls, in the Washington Post this week, showed two-thirds of Republicans did not want her to stand. Palin rose to prominence in 2008 when she was the surprise choice of John McCain as his running mate against Barack Obama. She enjoyed high ratings among conservatives in the aftermath of the election and remains a popular figure on the right. Last year, she seemed to be a likely contender for the presidency but with each month that passed this year, her chances became slimmer, and irritation crept in among her supporters over her indecision. She was too late, seeing the right-wing ground she would have sought to occupy already claimed by figures such as Congresswoman Michele Bachmann and now Texas governor Rick Perry. She frequently left an impression that she would liked to have stood, turning up at key Republican events throughout the year that were attended by declared candidates. She launched a tour this year accompanied by her family aboard a bus painted like a campaign one and arrived in New Hampshire at roughly the same time as Romney was there announcing his decision to stand. In August, she dropped into Iowa as Republican candidates gathered for the Ames straw poll. She developed a strong dislike of much of the media, with the exception of a few trusted friends at Fox, where she is a paid employee. Some commentators predicted she would not stand because she feared the impact of renewed media scrutiny on her family, while others said she was enjoying the money from her new celebrity career too much to enter the fray. She suffered a serious political setback with the attempted assassination of the Democratic Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords in Tucson, Arizona, in January. The attempt came after Palin had put out a graphic saying that Giffords was in her crosshairs. Although there was no evidence linking that to the shooting, it opened up a debate about whether rhetoric in American politics had become too violent. In her letter, Palin thanked her supporters who had defended her throughout the years and encouraged her to stand. She insisted that her decision not to stand meant she will fade out of politics and she set out her agenda for smaller government. “I will continue driving the discussion for freedom and free markets, including in the race for president where our candidates must embrace immediate action toward energy independence through domestic resource developments of conventional energy sources, along with renewables. We must reduce tax burdens and onerous regulations that kill American industry, and our candidates must always push to minimise government to strengthen the economy and allow the private sector to create jobs.” Sarah Palin Republicans United States US politics Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Chris Christie WIll Not Run And Will Further Depress GOP Base

Click here to view this media (h/t Heather for vid) My god, you would think Chris Christie was Michael Jackson’s doctor , the way the media treats everything related to his politics. I’ve never seen a newly elected governor get this type of gold-plated treatment before. Obviously, the hullabaloo surrounding him is a right-wing driven contraption which beltway media types cravenly picked up . He’s done nothing for the state of New Jersey and will likely not be reelected, but he’s the type of conservative bully that the tea party mentality loves. Anyway, when he acted like such a jerk at the Reagan Library, I knew he wouldn’t run, but he loves the stroking of his ego. I wonder if it will have a residual effect against him for the base since he is not a xenophobe or an NRA freak . Movement conservatives like Roger Ailes and uber-rich CEO’s have been wooing him for months now (since the republican voters hate their field of candidates they have been elevating Herman Cain lately ), which only whipped up the base to hate Romeny and Perry more than they already do and it raised hope that he might actually do it. The charge on Fox was led by none other than Bill Kristol, the man who helped create Sarah Palin, (which led Roger Ailes to hire her because he said she’s hot ) and who foolishly tried to turn the Murphy Brown incident into a career maker for Dan Quayle . Kristol had a dream in the Weekly Standard which got the ball rolling in renewed interest of Christie probably jumping into the primary. That led Jennifer Rubin to push the story over the cliff. So when push came to shove, Kristol made his prediction known on Fox to the delight of the teavangelicals. Here’s what he had to say on FNS : WALLACE: New Jersey Governor Chris Christie hammering the president’s economic policies with tough talk that has so many Republicans pleading for him to get into the presidential race. And we’re back now with the panel. Bill Kristol, you have been following this as closely as anyone in the world of politics, maybe on this planet. Is he going to run? And when are we going to know? KRISTOL: I don’t know whether he’s going to run. I’m not sure he knows he knows whether he’s going to run. I think it’s about 50/50. I think we’ll know within a week, basically, this week or maybe the very beginning of next week. A couple of weeks ago I wrote a little item saying — giving him a little schedule for announcing, and I suggested October 10th, which I guess is a week from tomorrow, or a week from Monday, and then he can suddenly emerge and appear in that October 11th debate in New Hampshire. It will be exciting. If he jumps in the pool, he’ll make a big splash. WALLACE: But what does your gut tell you? KRISTOL: I think he could do it. I think he could do it. WALLACE: No, that’s not what I’m — do you think he will get in? KRISTOL: Yes. WALLACE: You do? KRISTOL: Yes. WALLACE: Why? Because he said, “I’m not ready.” That’s tough to come back from, “I’m not ready.” KRISTOL: He can say, I was being honest, but I’ve been approached by an awful lot of people I respect who told me they think not only I can win — I think too much of the focus has been on who can beat Obama. Romney is doing OK against Obama. Who can govern? Who is up to this moment which is a genuine crisis? Who has shown the governing ability, both the boldness and the ability to actually work, in his case, with the Democratic legislature and get real budget reforms and (INAUDIBLE) reforms through? So I think he can make a case that he didn’t want to run, he didn’t expect to run, but a lot of people he respects have said he should — have told him he should run, and he’s going to do it . Wrong, Bill. He’s not going to do it. Christie made Bloody Bill and the entire GOP Grand Poobah donor class look like fools. They are spinning it now and saying that he’s built up good will for 2016, but with an ego the size of Christie’s, it’s all about him. Thanks for helping us out, Bill. You’re usually wrong about most things, but depressing your base for us was well done.

Continue reading …
Rosamund Pike: ‘I was amazed that Rowan Atkinson even knew who I was’

Rosamund Pike surprised everyone when she was cast as a Bond Girl 10 years ago. And

Continue reading …

What a joke. A one-time fee no matter how much revenue produced, or how much damage caused by each well? Chump change. A mere $120 million in a year? I suppose the Koch boys wrote this “compromise” for Governor Corbett: Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett proposed a fee on natural-gas drilling of as much as $160,000 a well in an effort to find a middle ground between public support for assessing drillers in the booming Marcellus Shale basin and a campaign pledge not to impose taxes. If passed by the state legislature, the recommendation would generate an estimated $120 million in the first year, most of which would be kept at the local level to help pay the cost to regulate drilling and to repair roads and bridges. Every other gas-drilling state already imposes a fee on wells or a tax on the value of gas that is extracted. The governor’s proposal also includes new requirements that would keep wells farther from streams and water wells. Environmentalists are concerned that the process of extracting shale gas, which involves pumping water and chemicals underground at high pressure, could contaminate surface and drinking water. “As the number of wells grows, so will the revenue,” said Mr. Corbett, a Republican, who linked the industry’s growth to the state’s economic future. “We are going to do this safely, and we’re going to do it right, because energy equals jobs.” Under the governor’s plan, about one-quarter of the well fees would go to state agencies like the Department of Environmental Protection and the rest to local communities. Some state lawmakers suggested they may push for higher fees or for more of the money to go to the state. Democrat Jay Costa, the state Senate minority leader, said the governor’s recommendations “fall woefully short” in terms of revenue and the amount that is going to the state. Some Republicans, who have a majority in both the Senate and House, are also pushing for more drilling revenue. GOP state Rep. Thomas Murt plans to introduce a bill Tuesday that includes a 4.9% tax on the gross value of the gas at the wellhead, rather than a fee. His bill would dedicate 29% of revenue to local governments, 27% to state environmental programs and 44% to state programs including drug rehabilitation .

Continue reading …