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Rep. Joe Walsh Educates Martin Bashir: ‘Your Profession Did Not Vet’ Obama

Republican Congressman Joe Walsh and left-leaning MSNBC anchor Martin Bashir got into a contentious exchange over Barack Obama on Friday. The Congressman bluntly explained to Bashir, ” Your profession did not vet [Obama]…”

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September 1, 1941 – A Word About Labor Day From FDR.

enlarge FDR – the concept of America being a group effort. Click here to view this media In 1941 it was only a matter of time before the U.S. would be engaged in a shooting war. On that Labor Day it was about building up military strength for what was going to be a very long haul and the Labor Movement was crucial to what would become a Herculean War Effort. In this Labor Day Address (which fell on September 1st), President Roosevelt called on the American people to put aside fundamental differences and focus on what needed to be done. Pres. Roosevelt: “On this day, this American holiday, we are celebrating the rights of free laboring men and women. The preservation of these rights is vitally important now, not only to us who enjoy them, but to the whole future of Christian civilization.” In 1941 Labor was regarded an an integral part of American society. Today, it’s all different.

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Mary Matalin Praises Glenn Beck Says He’s the ‘Furthest Thing From a Racist’

Click here to view this media While discussing the recent dust up over Rep. Andre Carson’s remarks that “Some of them in Congress right now with this tea party movement would love to see you and me — hanging on a tree” and Rep. Allen West’s threat to quit the Congressional Black Caucus if they did not condemn Rep. Carson’s remarks, CNN’s Wolf Blitzer asks Mary Matalin to weigh in. What we heard next was some full blown wingnut praise of Glenn Beck and his revisionist history of the black Founding Fathers. MATALIN: Well, it’s not representative of great American black leaders. You know, Glenn Beck did an astounding, remarkable series on the civil rights struggle in this country, including black Founding Fathers. And that Congressman, and Maxine Waters who said all the “tea party” can go straight to hell, they’re not in that great tradition. And they should be condemned. And a huge attraction, a significant attraction, and this is quantified in the polls, to Barack Obama, among white people was his promise to be post-racial. This is retro-racial and not only should the CBC condemn it, the President should condemn it. Matalin’s fellow CNN contributor, Donna Brazile was not amused to say the least. A bit later in the segment Matalin also said this about Beck after accusing Donna Brazile of never having watched any of his clap-trap on Fox, not that I’d blame her if she hasn’t. Watching too much of that stuff is enough to rot someone’s brain. MATALIN: Did you see any of his programs? Did you watch any of his remarkable documentaries on the founding and the black Founding Fathers and the scholars that he had on and the scholarship that he did and the accolades that he received in the black community? This… you’re making your point that you were disregarding earlier, which is we’re just judging people and saying things about people, without even knowing who they are or what they’ve said. This is not a show about Glenn Beck, but he’s the furthest thing from a racist. And I think why we have to have this conversation is what happens with Democrats and liberals is you don’t, you oppose their policies, then they brand you a racist. Coming from someone who worked for Dick Cheney, this sort of flame throwing is not that surprising from Matalin. Blitzer did at least ask her about Beck calling President Obama a “racist” with a “deep-seated hatred of white people,” but neither Brazile or Blitzer called out Matalin properly for her praise of Beck’s revisionist history of the civil rights movement and the Founding Fathers on his television show before Fox finally canceled him. AlterNet has more on the supposed “remarkable series” Matalin mentioned here — Glenn Beck’s Shocking Drive-By on African American History : In a moment when the absurd met the bizarre, Beck was recently awarded an honorary doctorate by the most esteemed Liberty University —a seeming confirmation of his position as America’s most dilettante and grossly amateurish historian. While serious students of history after much hard work, reading and scholarship offer carefully formulated narratives of our past and present, Beck proceeds with unadulterated, untempered confidence as a scattershot, partisan, hack. In short: History says whatever Glenn Beck deems it does–a formulation which is ultimately dependent upon how the political winds blow on any given day. However, Beck’s recent show, creatively titled “The Black Founding Fathers,” was even by his ratings driven modus operandi too much to stomach. It was an assault on taste and reason. There, Glenn Beck did a drive-by on the history of Black Americans, as well as on Progressive and forward thinking Americans everywhere. On that show, Beck extended a hand of friendship to tell a more “inclusive” story of this country’s founding, while simultaneously spitting on the memories of those very same African American visionaries who risked death so that America would be a full democracy in keeping with its radical potential. The Black Founding Fathers As is typical for him, on The Black Founding Fathers show Beck offered a very duplicitous narrative. There he outlined a “hidden” history of black American triumph and success in the face of discrimination and bigotry at the time of the United States’ founding. Given that Beck has displayed a not too veiled hostility to black Americans in the past, his efforts to highlight this often forgotten part of our nation’s history was surprising. What he did next was shocking in its boldness: Beck then proceeded to use the history of African Americans as a step-stool upon which to advocate for the elimination of Ethnic Studies programs and to present the Framers and the Constitution as essentially anti-racist in intent and form. It was both fascinating and oddly perverse to watch Beck and his guests bastardize the history of Black Americans in the service of a white washed U.S. history. Sadly, the pioneering and politically radical history which Beck attempted to mine for his show is only useful to him to the degree that it uplifts a narrative of American exceptionalism and White American triumphalism. Read on… And here’s more on Beck’s racism from Media Matters: Beck’s accusation that progressives have “co-opted” civil rights movement rings hollow Beck’s “talk about racism” — more race-baiting, falsehoods, and distortions And here’s more from our own David Neiwert: Glenn Beck does remind us of the Civil Rights Era — that is, the people who hated Martin Luther King Glenn Beck lies about authors of NAACP report on Tea Party racism, and refutes not a single fact Obama’s election ended racism so we don’t ever want to hear about it again! ACORN is a handy substitute for the ‘n word’: At 912 event, black teens harassed by hysterical teabaggers If Glenn Beck is the “furthest thing from a racist” Matalin is aware of, she’s keeping some pretty bad company. UPDATE: Media Matters has more on this segment which might explain Matalin’s praise of Glenn Beck here — Why Is Mary Matalin Randomly Bringing Up Her Business Partner Glenn Beck On CNN? : According to her CNN bio , Matalin is the editor-in-chief of Threshold Editions, an imprint of publisher Simon & Schuster. Threshold has published most, if not all, of Beck’s recent books. In fact, it’s publishing Beck’s The Snow Angel next month. That fact didn’t come up as Matalin randomly injected Beck into the conversation on CNN. Is Matalin concerned about the flagging profile of one of her most productive authors now that his Fox News show has ended and his rally in Israel was met with little fanfare ? An on-screen graphic during the segment did describe Matalin as the editor-in-chief of Simon & Schuster’s “conservative imprint,” but there was no mention of its relationship with Beck. More analysis on the segment there and Matalin’s conflict of interest as well.

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AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka is very active in advance of the Labor Day holiday. In addition to releasing the video above (and another video, see below), the organization released it’s “America Wants To Work Action Plan.” The plan (which can be read in detail here ) includes six planks: 1. Rebuild America’s schools and transportation and energy systems: The plan argues that reinvesting in this critical, but crumbling, infrastructure will create millions of new jobs. 2. Revive U.S. manufacturing and stop exporting good jobs overseas: A number of policy proposals are included in this section, including strong opposition to free trade deals. 3. Put people to work doing work that needs to be done: This one is largely a repeat of No. 1 above, but also includes other policy options proposed by progressive members of Congress. 4. Help federal, state, and local governments avoid more layoffs and cutbacks of public services: This is an important focus — the bipartisan assault on government workers at all levels is a big problem with the current failure in boosting the job market. 5. Help fill the massive shortfall of consumer demand by extending unemployment benefits and keeping homeowners in their homes: These moves are so obvious, it’s a crime that they haven’t been done yet. 6. Reform Wall Street so that it helps Main Street create jobs: Wall Street used to help Main Street, but they’ve moved away from that. Maybe we should do something about that. The organization also launched a “Who Do You Heart” campaign for Twitter and Facebook, asking everyone to let everyone know what group(s) of workers they are thankful for this Labor Day. Anyone can post to Facebook or Twitter via a web interface for the campaign.

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MSNBC’s Schultz Slams ‘Damn Political Phony’ Marco Rubio as ‘Not a True American’

On Thursday's The Ed Show, MSNBC host Ed Schultz excoriated Senator Marco Rubio and other “damn Republicans” because Rubio recently attacked Schultz and fellow MSNBC host Rachel Maddow for comments they made about the Florida Republican. Schultz suggested the Rubio's father might be “ashamed” of him for not accepting the MSNBC host's invitation to come on his show and debate him, claimed that he was “not a true American” for his refusal to debate, and charged that “You're a Tea Partier, and you don't give a damn about” Americans. Schultz ended up calling Rubio a “damn political phony” and labeled him as “the problem” as he declared that he wishes he could get Rubio defeated: Hell, you're nothing but a damn political phony, Senator. I don't know how in the hell you got in office. And if I could, I would work like hell to defeat you because I think you are the problem. You are the problem. You attack without facts. You attack without the human connection that your party has helped us lose in this country. After asserting that he does not “know how in the hell” Rubio got elected, Schultz ironically brought aboard former Democratic Congressman Alan Grayson, who is infamous for his habit of making unusually over-the-top personal attacks on Republicans that no doubt incite opposition against the Florida Democrat rather than assist his cause. Below is a transcript of relevant portions of the Thursday, September 1, The Ed Show on MSNBC: ED SCHULTZ: You see, Rubio is a political coward. He doesn't have to guts or the character to debate his reckless statements on this show. He can hide elsewhere. He wants to hide behind a political action committee this time and basically play the victim. … This man is suggesting that there is a generation of Americans that care less about their parents because of Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. This may be one of the most offensive things I have ever heard a United States Senator say about the people of this country. He's attacking the character of Americans because of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, which has helped this country. It's helped millions of Americans. … My parents lived in the unselfish generation, and for you to say that they were lesser Americans because they were involved in Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, you owe my family an apology or at least be brave enough to give an explanation on this program in front of the camera as to what the hell you're really talking about. … I remember our Aunt Margaret moved in with us when she was failing. Senator Rubio, you mean to tell me that there are no families in America today that do that, that that institution and loyalty and love of country and family is gone because you damn Republicans just can't get rid of the big three? … I'm offended by Marco Rubio. and I think we are seeing he is not a true American because he runs from debate. Senator, come to me, or I will go to you. You name the time and the place, and let's sit down and have a professional conversation about what you really mean when you say that we as Americans have been weakend by something that has clearly benefitted our society and allowed people to live in their later years in dignity. But the tape that we just played of you was kind of contradictory of the speech that you gave at the Reagan Library. No wonder you're dodging the interview. Hell, you can go across the street, and they'll throw you softballs all day long, but you know what, Senator, one thing that my dad taught me – maybe your dad taught you this, but it doesn't seem like it – don't ever run from a debate and don't ever be afraid to speak your peace if in your heart you believe what you're saying is the truth. Senator, I am offering you the opportunity to broadcast in front of a liberal audience. I'll give you the hour to talk about it. Convince people. Get in the arena if you really believe this, Senator. Get in the arena and tell the audience on MSNBC that we are a weaker nation and this is why we are a weaker nation, and explain to me what institutions you're talking about that have taken down our people. You're a Tea Partier, and you don't give a damn about any of the Americans because, you see, it's kind of in your makeup, Senator. No, unless your bio is wrong, I don't think you got any private sector experience in your background. Hell, you've been a government guy. You're one of these typical government guys that says everybody else has got to serve it up because you've got your own. My father taught me to debate and to get into the arena, and I think your dad might be ashamed of the fact that you run from the cameras after you get away from the podium because I don't think you can explain yourself. I don't think you can explain to the American people just how weak we are. How about the boys in Afghanistan? Their parents are on Social Security. Do they come from weak parents? How about the men and women who have lost their lives fighting terrorism in this country? Are they weak because they've paid into Social Security? Hell, you're nothing but a damn political phony, Senator. I don't know how in the hell you got in office. And if I could, I would work like hell to defeat you because I think you are the problem. You are the problem. You attack without facts. You attack without the human connection that your party has helped us lose in this country.

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Welcome to First Look, our daily roundup of early-bird news: • A federal regulator is said to be preparing to sue more than a dozen big banks, charging that they misrepresented the quality of mortgage securities during the housing boom. (The New York Times) • The Federal Reserve recently asked Bank of America to prepare

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Libya intervention: British forces played key role, says Cameron

Prime minister suggests further military actions may lie ahead as Arab League members ‘toughen stance’ against Syria David Cameron has said “armchair generals” who criticised the government’s strategy in Libya had been proved wrong as he hailed Britain’s role in the intervention as “very significant”. The prime minister insisted Britain would remain a “full-spectrum player” in the future, despite defence cuts, and signalled further interventions may lie ahead as he revealed that some members of the Arab League were “toughening their stance” over the situation in Syria. Cameron was speaking after co-chairing a major international summit to build support for the fledgling rebel administration. Libya’s new leaders presented themselves to the Paris summit, promising a swift transition to democracy after six months of Nato-backed revolution and asking for immediate UN support in organising elections. Speaking on BBC Radio 4′s Today programme, Cameron said Britain had played “a very important role” in the intervention. “A lot of armchair generals who said ‘you couldn’t do it without an aircraft carrier’ – they were wrong, and a lot of people said that Tripoli was completely different to Benghazi and that the two don’t get on – they were wrong. “People who said ‘this is all going to be an enormous swamp of Islamists and extremists’ – they were wrong. People who said we were going to run out of munitions – they were wrong. I think we should be proud of what our forces did.” Cameron said there were “lots of lessons to learn” from the conflict in Libya, and that the government would “take our time learning them”. Support for the revolution was justified and in the UK’s national interest, he said. There had been “a moral imperative” to intervene to stop a slaughter in Benghazi and the Libyan rebels’ success would allow the Arab spring to continue. “Gaddafi was a monster. He was responsible for appalling crimes, including crimes in this country and I think the world will be much better off without him,” he said. Despite trumpeting Britain’s role, Cameron said there was a danger of people in the west “taking too much credit for themselves” for what was really a Libyan triumph. He said: “This is the Libyan people who have rid themselves of a dictator, and they have suffered appalling loss of life from some very brave actions. This is important, because I think one of the reasons why Tripoli is getting itself back together again in relatively good order is because it wasn’t a foreign force that knocked over Gaddafi’s regime, the Libyans did it themselves. This wasn’t done too them – they did it, and so they are rapidly mending it.” On the lack of intervention in Syria, despite the parallel situation of a dictator doing “dreadful things to his people”, he said Britain had “been in the vanguard in arguing for a tougher approach”, and that President Assad should stand aside. But, he said, the circumstances were different because there wasn’t the same backing either in the Arab League or internationally, though he said there were signs that members of the Arab League were beginning to take a harder stance against Bashar al-Assad’s regime. On Britain’s stance, he said: “We have argued for travel bans, asset freezes and for sanctions and a tough approach to this regime. I had good conversations with some members of the Arab League last night in Paris and they are toughening their stance as they realise that what they are doing is appalling. They realise he [Assad] had his chance to demonstrate he was in favour of reform and he has failed to do that.” On Britain’s defence capabilities in light of an 8% cut in budgets, Cameron insisted Britain had “punched its weight, even above its weight” in the number of sorties over Libya. British forces had “not suffered” from not having an aircraft carrier as a result of decisions made in the strategic defence review, he said, pointing to “basing” abilities in the Mediterranean for Typhoon and Tornado aircraft flying over Libyan skies. The prime minister challenged House of Commons library figures that suggested Britain had performed just 10% of all strike sorties, saying the figure was twice that. “There were somewhere just less than 8,000 sorties,” he insisted. “Britain performed 1,600 of those, so around a fifth of strike sorties. That is punching at our weight or even above our weight. We played a very important role, not just in the number of strike sorties but also in the fact that we were there right from the beginning. “It was Britain and France with America that called time on Gaddafi and said that we were not going to allow a slaughter in Benghazi.” Libya Arab and Middle East unrest Military Defence policy Syria Middle East Africa Hélène Mulholland guardian.co.uk

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Frank Rich Takes a Look at the Fleecing of America Over the Last Ten Years Since the 9/11 Attacks

Click here to view this media MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell talked to author Frank Rich about his recent column in New York Magazine which takes a look at the real tragedy in America since the attacks on 9-11 and as he wrote there: The hallowed burial grounds of 9/11 were supposed to bequeath us a stronger nation, not a busted one… In retrospect, the most consequential event of the past ten years may not have been 9/11 or the Iraq War but the looting of the American economy by those in power in Washington and on Wall Street. You can read the entire article here — Day’s End: The 9/11 decade is now over. The terrorists lost. But who won? . Transcript via Lexis Nexis below the fold: O`DONNELL: In tonight`s Spotlight, the hard realities about the 10th anniversary of the September 11th attacks. The day that some believed would unify the nation going forward has done no such thing. Frank Rich, in a piece for “New York Magazine,” asks the questions, if the terrorists lost, who won? He writes, “the connection between the 10-year-old war in Afghanistan and our new civil war over America`s there year old economic crisis may well prove the most consequential historical fact of the hideous decade they bracket. The hallowed burial grounds of 9/11 were supposed to bequeath us a strong nation, not a busted one. In retrospect, the most consequential event of the past 10 years may not have been 9/11 or the Iraq war, but the looting of the American economy by those in power in Washington and on Wall Street.” Joining me now, Frank Rich, writer at large for “New York Magazine.” Frank, thanks for joining me tonight. FRANK RICH, “NEW YORK MAGAZINE”: Nice to be with you. O`DONNELL: You mention in your piece something that I had forgotten in the flow of history, that the Enron scandal broke just about a month after 9/11. And it seems we actually had at least as big a lesson in the Enron scandal about what was to come in this decade than what had happened on 9/11. RICH: If you go back, indeed, and look at the Enron scandal, it had all the features of the subprime crisis that would come and the housing bubble, you know, phoney bookkeeping, worthless paper, credit agencies that fell down on the job. And it was very embarrassing to President Bush at the time because of his long association with Enron as a political donor. And he promised a lot of the cleanup of Wall Street that we`ve heard about in recent years. And none of it happened. He was going to have a SWAT team that would go against Wall Street crime. As soon as it faded from the headlines, nothing happened. We know what did happen; basically, Wall Street and the banks and mortgage lenders and all the rest were given the green light to go ahead with impunity, during wartime. O`DONNELL: You talk about how 9/11 was used, kind of pulled off the shelf in certain situations politically and in governing, in the instance, for example, of helping to justify the invasion of Iraq. But much of the piece is about what`s happened to the economy, what`s happened to the politics of the economy. You make a point here about taxation when you say if we don`t need new taxes to fight two wars, why do we need them for anything? That, as much as anything else, informs where our tax debate has gone. RICH: Exactly. I think in the end, the most crucial decision that Bush made right after 9/11 — and he said it explicitly by the end of September of that year — was we don`t want the American people to sacrifice. You know, maybe longer lines at airport check-in, but that was that. Go to Disney Land, go shopping. And there would be no taxes to pay for what would turn out to be two wars. I think that injected a cancer into the American political culture just as you were saying. If we don`t pay for wars, why do we have to pay for anything? And I think you see the seeds now of this anti-government movement that`s in some ways paralyzing the country. O`DONNELL: And the not paying for anything Bush style could not go on forever. You mention that he delivered this very large Medicare prescription drug benefit completely unpaid for, large and expensive new benefit. But you also say it is that America where rampage and greed usurp the common good in wartime, the country crashed just as Bush fled the White House that we live in today. It did crash by the time Bush had fled the White House, the whole scheme of doing things without paying for them. That has been visited entirely on President Obama as a burden. Has there been any better way for him to have managed that burden, given the Republican resistance of the last couple of years? RICH: There probably has been. For instance, I wish, as I think many do, that he had talked about jobs and the connection between the loss of jobs and this whole crisis and what happened to Wall Street much earlier and more concretely than he is by this late date, giving this speech, the starting time of which is so contended, next week. But Republicans were out to destroy him. As we know, Mitch McConnell said their main goal is to keep Obama from being reelected. But this comes, again, out of the post-9/11 lapse in this country. This country was ready to sacrifice. Bush had an approval rating that was almost perfect. People after that very contentious 2000 election were willing to give him another chance and unite behind him. Instead, everyone went their separate ways and here we are. O`DONNELL: It`s hard to say what`s most surprising about the aftermath of 9/11. But I think in your piece, the thing that most jumped out as the — wouldn`t have predicted that is that turn of events where we saw some legislation pending that was to help the first responders to 9/11 who developed health issues after being in that rubble and breathing in that dust and the dangerous elements that were in the air down there. That was being blocked by Republicans in Congress. And you write, “the most vocal champions of the surviving 9/11 victims and their families were New York officials and celebrities like Jon Stewart, most of them liberal Democrats. The righteous anger of the right had moved on to the cause of taking down a president with the middle name `Hussein.`” Who would have predicted that it would have fallen to Jon Stewart to be the champion of those victims? RICH: It`s amazing, particularly since you had a Republican party, as epitomized by people like Rudy Giuliani, who were 9/11 — a noun, a verb, 911, as Biden said. They were all guarding this horrible tragedy, and you know, enforcing a kind of political correctness. And we get to a point not that many years later where you have Tom Coburn, a conservative Republican, leading the charge to keep the federal government from helping first responders and their families from 9/11. That`s an enormous sea change, matched, by the way, by the new isolationism in the Republican party, because that`s the other big change. The McCain, Lindsey Graham view about — neoconservative view, the Bush view, the Bush-Cheney view, is now also not the mainstream of the GOP anymore. It`s going back to its isolationist, pre-9/11 mind set, as they would say. O`DONNELL: It is a compelling and grim piece. Frank Rich, writer at large for “New York Magazine,” thank you very much for joining me tonight. RICH: Delighted to be with you.

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Frank Rich Takes a Look at the Fleecing of America Over the Last Ten Years Since the 9/11 Attacks

Click here to view this media MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell talked to author Frank Rich about his recent column in New York Magazine which takes a look at the real tragedy in America since the attacks on 9-11 and as he wrote there: The hallowed burial grounds of 9/11 were supposed to bequeath us a stronger nation, not a busted one… In retrospect, the most consequential event of the past ten years may not have been 9/11 or the Iraq War but the looting of the American economy by those in power in Washington and on Wall Street. You can read the entire article here — Day’s End: The 9/11 decade is now over. The terrorists lost. But who won? . Transcript via Lexis Nexis below the fold: O`DONNELL: In tonight`s Spotlight, the hard realities about the 10th anniversary of the September 11th attacks. The day that some believed would unify the nation going forward has done no such thing. Frank Rich, in a piece for “New York Magazine,” asks the questions, if the terrorists lost, who won? He writes, “the connection between the 10-year-old war in Afghanistan and our new civil war over America`s there year old economic crisis may well prove the most consequential historical fact of the hideous decade they bracket. The hallowed burial grounds of 9/11 were supposed to bequeath us a strong nation, not a busted one. In retrospect, the most consequential event of the past 10 years may not have been 9/11 or the Iraq war, but the looting of the American economy by those in power in Washington and on Wall Street.” Joining me now, Frank Rich, writer at large for “New York Magazine.” Frank, thanks for joining me tonight. FRANK RICH, “NEW YORK MAGAZINE”: Nice to be with you. O`DONNELL: You mention in your piece something that I had forgotten in the flow of history, that the Enron scandal broke just about a month after 9/11. And it seems we actually had at least as big a lesson in the Enron scandal about what was to come in this decade than what had happened on 9/11. RICH: If you go back, indeed, and look at the Enron scandal, it had all the features of the subprime crisis that would come and the housing bubble, you know, phoney bookkeeping, worthless paper, credit agencies that fell down on the job. And it was very embarrassing to President Bush at the time because of his long association with Enron as a political donor. And he promised a lot of the cleanup of Wall Street that we`ve heard about in recent years. And none of it happened. He was going to have a SWAT team that would go against Wall Street crime. As soon as it faded from the headlines, nothing happened. We know what did happen; basically, Wall Street and the banks and mortgage lenders and all the rest were given the green light to go ahead with impunity, during wartime. O`DONNELL: You talk about how 9/11 was used, kind of pulled off the shelf in certain situations politically and in governing, in the instance, for example, of helping to justify the invasion of Iraq. But much of the piece is about what`s happened to the economy, what`s happened to the politics of the economy. You make a point here about taxation when you say if we don`t need new taxes to fight two wars, why do we need them for anything? That, as much as anything else, informs where our tax debate has gone. RICH: Exactly. I think in the end, the most crucial decision that Bush made right after 9/11 — and he said it explicitly by the end of September of that year — was we don`t want the American people to sacrifice. You know, maybe longer lines at airport check-in, but that was that. Go to Disney Land, go shopping. And there would be no taxes to pay for what would turn out to be two wars. I think that injected a cancer into the American political culture just as you were saying. If we don`t pay for wars, why do we have to pay for anything? And I think you see the seeds now of this anti-government movement that`s in some ways paralyzing the country. O`DONNELL: And the not paying for anything Bush style could not go on forever. You mention that he delivered this very large Medicare prescription drug benefit completely unpaid for, large and expensive new benefit. But you also say it is that America where rampage and greed usurp the common good in wartime, the country crashed just as Bush fled the White House that we live in today. It did crash by the time Bush had fled the White House, the whole scheme of doing things without paying for them. That has been visited entirely on President Obama as a burden. Has there been any better way for him to have managed that burden, given the Republican resistance of the last couple of years? RICH: There probably has been. For instance, I wish, as I think many do, that he had talked about jobs and the connection between the loss of jobs and this whole crisis and what happened to Wall Street much earlier and more concretely than he is by this late date, giving this speech, the starting time of which is so contended, next week. But Republicans were out to destroy him. As we know, Mitch McConnell said their main goal is to keep Obama from being reelected. But this comes, again, out of the post-9/11 lapse in this country. This country was ready to sacrifice. Bush had an approval rating that was almost perfect. People after that very contentious 2000 election were willing to give him another chance and unite behind him. Instead, everyone went their separate ways and here we are. O`DONNELL: It`s hard to say what`s most surprising about the aftermath of 9/11. But I think in your piece, the thing that most jumped out as the — wouldn`t have predicted that is that turn of events where we saw some legislation pending that was to help the first responders to 9/11 who developed health issues after being in that rubble and breathing in that dust and the dangerous elements that were in the air down there. That was being blocked by Republicans in Congress. And you write, “the most vocal champions of the surviving 9/11 victims and their families were New York officials and celebrities like Jon Stewart, most of them liberal Democrats. The righteous anger of the right had moved on to the cause of taking down a president with the middle name `Hussein.`” Who would have predicted that it would have fallen to Jon Stewart to be the champion of those victims? RICH: It`s amazing, particularly since you had a Republican party, as epitomized by people like Rudy Giuliani, who were 9/11 — a noun, a verb, 911, as Biden said. They were all guarding this horrible tragedy, and you know, enforcing a kind of political correctness. And we get to a point not that many years later where you have Tom Coburn, a conservative Republican, leading the charge to keep the federal government from helping first responders and their families from 9/11. That`s an enormous sea change, matched, by the way, by the new isolationism in the Republican party, because that`s the other big change. The McCain, Lindsey Graham view about — neoconservative view, the Bush view, the Bush-Cheney view, is now also not the mainstream of the GOP anymore. It`s going back to its isolationist, pre-9/11 mind set, as they would say. O`DONNELL: It is a compelling and grim piece. Frank Rich, writer at large for “New York Magazine,” thank you very much for joining me tonight. RICH: Delighted to be with you.

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Frank Rich Takes a Look at the Fleecing of America Over the Last Ten Years Since the 9/11 Attacks

Click here to view this media MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell talked to author Frank Rich about his recent column in New York Magazine which takes a look at the real tragedy in America since the attacks on 9-11 and as he wrote there: The hallowed burial grounds of 9/11 were supposed to bequeath us a stronger nation, not a busted one… In retrospect, the most consequential event of the past ten years may not have been 9/11 or the Iraq War but the looting of the American economy by those in power in Washington and on Wall Street. You can read the entire article here — Day’s End: The 9/11 decade is now over. The terrorists lost. But who won? . Transcript via Lexis Nexis below the fold: O`DONNELL: In tonight`s Spotlight, the hard realities about the 10th anniversary of the September 11th attacks. The day that some believed would unify the nation going forward has done no such thing. Frank Rich, in a piece for “New York Magazine,” asks the questions, if the terrorists lost, who won? He writes, “the connection between the 10-year-old war in Afghanistan and our new civil war over America`s there year old economic crisis may well prove the most consequential historical fact of the hideous decade they bracket. The hallowed burial grounds of 9/11 were supposed to bequeath us a strong nation, not a busted one. In retrospect, the most consequential event of the past 10 years may not have been 9/11 or the Iraq war, but the looting of the American economy by those in power in Washington and on Wall Street.” Joining me now, Frank Rich, writer at large for “New York Magazine.” Frank, thanks for joining me tonight. FRANK RICH, “NEW YORK MAGAZINE”: Nice to be with you. O`DONNELL: You mention in your piece something that I had forgotten in the flow of history, that the Enron scandal broke just about a month after 9/11. And it seems we actually had at least as big a lesson in the Enron scandal about what was to come in this decade than what had happened on 9/11. RICH: If you go back, indeed, and look at the Enron scandal, it had all the features of the subprime crisis that would come and the housing bubble, you know, phoney bookkeeping, worthless paper, credit agencies that fell down on the job. And it was very embarrassing to President Bush at the time because of his long association with Enron as a political donor. And he promised a lot of the cleanup of Wall Street that we`ve heard about in recent years. And none of it happened. He was going to have a SWAT team that would go against Wall Street crime. As soon as it faded from the headlines, nothing happened. We know what did happen; basically, Wall Street and the banks and mortgage lenders and all the rest were given the green light to go ahead with impunity, during wartime. O`DONNELL: You talk about how 9/11 was used, kind of pulled off the shelf in certain situations politically and in governing, in the instance, for example, of helping to justify the invasion of Iraq. But much of the piece is about what`s happened to the economy, what`s happened to the politics of the economy. You make a point here about taxation when you say if we don`t need new taxes to fight two wars, why do we need them for anything? That, as much as anything else, informs where our tax debate has gone. RICH: Exactly. I think in the end, the most crucial decision that Bush made right after 9/11 — and he said it explicitly by the end of September of that year — was we don`t want the American people to sacrifice. You know, maybe longer lines at airport check-in, but that was that. Go to Disney Land, go shopping. And there would be no taxes to pay for what would turn out to be two wars. I think that injected a cancer into the American political culture just as you were saying. If we don`t pay for wars, why do we have to pay for anything? And I think you see the seeds now of this anti-government movement that`s in some ways paralyzing the country. O`DONNELL: And the not paying for anything Bush style could not go on forever. You mention that he delivered this very large Medicare prescription drug benefit completely unpaid for, large and expensive new benefit. But you also say it is that America where rampage and greed usurp the common good in wartime, the country crashed just as Bush fled the White House that we live in today. It did crash by the time Bush had fled the White House, the whole scheme of doing things without paying for them. That has been visited entirely on President Obama as a burden. Has there been any better way for him to have managed that burden, given the Republican resistance of the last couple of years? RICH: There probably has been. For instance, I wish, as I think many do, that he had talked about jobs and the connection between the loss of jobs and this whole crisis and what happened to Wall Street much earlier and more concretely than he is by this late date, giving this speech, the starting time of which is so contended, next week. But Republicans were out to destroy him. As we know, Mitch McConnell said their main goal is to keep Obama from being reelected. But this comes, again, out of the post-9/11 lapse in this country. This country was ready to sacrifice. Bush had an approval rating that was almost perfect. People after that very contentious 2000 election were willing to give him another chance and unite behind him. Instead, everyone went their separate ways and here we are. O`DONNELL: It`s hard to say what`s most surprising about the aftermath of 9/11. But I think in your piece, the thing that most jumped out as the — wouldn`t have predicted that is that turn of events where we saw some legislation pending that was to help the first responders to 9/11 who developed health issues after being in that rubble and breathing in that dust and the dangerous elements that were in the air down there. That was being blocked by Republicans in Congress. And you write, “the most vocal champions of the surviving 9/11 victims and their families were New York officials and celebrities like Jon Stewart, most of them liberal Democrats. The righteous anger of the right had moved on to the cause of taking down a president with the middle name `Hussein.`” Who would have predicted that it would have fallen to Jon Stewart to be the champion of those victims? RICH: It`s amazing, particularly since you had a Republican party, as epitomized by people like Rudy Giuliani, who were 9/11 — a noun, a verb, 911, as Biden said. They were all guarding this horrible tragedy, and you know, enforcing a kind of political correctness. And we get to a point not that many years later where you have Tom Coburn, a conservative Republican, leading the charge to keep the federal government from helping first responders and their families from 9/11. That`s an enormous sea change, matched, by the way, by the new isolationism in the Republican party, because that`s the other big change. The McCain, Lindsey Graham view about — neoconservative view, the Bush view, the Bush-Cheney view, is now also not the mainstream of the GOP anymore. It`s going back to its isolationist, pre-9/11 mind set, as they would say. O`DONNELL: It is a compelling and grim piece. Frank Rich, writer at large for “New York Magazine,” thank you very much for joining me tonight. RICH: Delighted to be with you.

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