Newsweek editor Tina Brown defended her magazine's controversial cover portraying Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) as the “Queen of Rage” on the August 10 edition of MSNBC's “Morning Joe,” offering no apology since the three-term congresswoman could become America's first “crazy” president. “Some people look at this picture and think, you know, Michele Bachmann looks crazy,” remarked Brown. “Some people look at it and think it's the next President of the United States. The fact that these two things are no longer mutually exclusive is what, I think, makes it pretty compelling.” [Video follows page break] Explaining her decision to use an unflattering photo of Bachmann that even the left-wing National Organization for Women (NOW) called sexist , Brown claimed the other pictures were “offensive” and “strange.” “You know, there was one picture of her praying, which frankly we rejected because we thought that seemed somehow some kind of a commentary on her religiosity that maybe would be offensive,” contended Brown, adding, “There was another picture of her sitting kind of sideways and I thought she looked extremely strange.” MSNBC contributor Mike Barnicle came to Brown's defense, insisting Newsweek's photo depicted Bachmann accurately: “It looks like her. It looks like her. It looks like her. I've seen her in person. I've seen her up close in person. It looks like her.” As Brown feigned sympathy for Bachmann, Joe Scarborough could hardly contain his laughter: “I got a question: who's the photographer? Because I don't ever want him to be in the same room with me.” When co-host Willie Geist wondered whether the infamous photo was snapped during a light check, Brown dismissed the question as “absolute nonsense.” A transcript of the relevant portions of the segment can be found below: MSNBC Morning Joe August 10, 2011 7:02 a.m. Eastern MIKA BRZEZINSKI: And joining the table, editor-in-chief of Newsweek magazine and the Daily Beast, Tina Brown. Tina! Alright Tina! We're not going to play this game. (Crosstalk) TINA BROWN, Newsweek editor: I'm not playing any game. No games for me. No games for me. (Crosstalk) BRZEZINSKI: You are one of the savviest people I've seen in the media industry and this cover just proves it. It's perfect. JOE SCARBOROUGH: It's a cheap shot. Come on. She looks cross-eyed, it's a light check. Come on. (Crosstalk) BROWN: No listen, I mean. Some people look at this picture and think, you know, Michele Bachmann looks crazy. Some people look at it and think it's the next President of the United States. The fact that these two things are no longer mutually exclusive is what, I think, makes it pretty compelling. BRZEZINSKI: The Queen of Rage? BROWN: Absolutely. Listen, this came out of a week when a New York Times columnist called the Tea Party terrorists and then apologized the next week. This is a very polarized moment in politics and this cover, to us, absolutely captured that moment. SCARBOROUGH: What her looking cross-eyed to the light check? Capture this moment? BROWN: Not cross-eyed. Listen she has – the intensity in her eyes is in all the photographs of her, you know. This is the thing that's connecting with people. We have people in the crowd saying, you know, something about her tells me I should follow her And there is something about Michele Bachmann with the eyes looking out. She has a very very, this very kind of intense demeanor. –Alex Fitzsimmons is a News Analysis intern at the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.
Continue reading …For some reason, Associated Press reporters Eric Tucker and Thomas Watkins, in a story about the wave of flash mob crime in the U.S. this summer, felt compelled to find an “expert” who would express some sympathy for its participants. Well, they supposedly found one. His name is Jonathan Taplin. Here's what he told the AP: Jonathan Taplin, director of the innovation lab at the University of Southern California's Annenberg School for Communication, said he was not surprised to see people using social media for organizing flash mob robberies. “You are essentially having a world where you have 25 million people who are underemployed and 2 percent of the population doing better than they ever have,” Taplin said. “Why wouldn't that lead to some sort of social unrest? Why wouldn't people use the latest technologies to effect that?” Initially, it appears odd, to say the least, that Tucker and Watkins would have found their “let's blame our unjust society” quote from a guy like Taplin in the first place. Really, that's a pretty fiery quote coming from a guy at an “innovation lab.” What does Taplin know about what goes on in the hearts and minds of those who, from various accounts nationwide, have appeared to be mostly black and mostly teenagers — to the point where publications like the Chicago Tribune have felt the need to explain their politically incorrect decisions to say as much? It seems even odder when one learns that Taplin holds himself out in his Annenberg job as a specialist “in international communication management and the field of digital media entertainment.” This makes him an expert on class envy and social unrest? Let's look at what the Annenberg Innovation Lab project's ” initial areas of focus ” are: Innovative applications for configuring news content that fully utilize the capabilities of devices such as digital tablets and e-Book readers. Interactive Television applications and widgets for the next generation of fiber optic delivered high definition TV. The evolution of the E-Book into the multimedia realm using video, music and graphics in addition to text. The use of portable digital devices of all sorts in the production, distribution and monetization of news and entertainment content. The use of immersive digital platforms as a journalistic medium. The evolution of social networking as a platform for commerce, entertainment and journalism. Obviously there's nothing wrong with any of this, but AP's reporters either didn't know or didn't care that they were basically talking to someone who could fairly be characterized as just another media guy (though with a much wider background than is often found, as noted here in a sympathetic CBS New piece in February 2009). The AP's use of Taplin as a so-called expert starts to make (propaganda) sense once one sees his favorite news sources at the bottom of this April 2011 interview : “New York Times, Talking Points Memo (TPM), FiveThirtyEight.” Hmm. The latter two indicate more than an average person's interest in politics. Far more important, Tucker and Watkins didn't disclose that Taplin's sympathies unsurprisingly lean far to the left, as evidenced by
Continue reading …Just as with the last Republican takeover of the House in 1995, it was easy to predict the media elite were going to dig deep into the mud and throw every smear they had at the new conservative powers in town. Congress finally passed, and the president signed, a deeply deficient kick-the-can compromise into law in order to raise the debt ceiling. Tea Party conservatives correctly denounced the deal as woefully inadequate. When Standard & Poor’s downgraded the creditworthiness of the United States government, Sen. John Kerry shamelessly labeled it a “Tea Party downgrade,” and no one in the press questioned him.
Continue reading …When I was a kid and we were deciding what games to play and how to play them, our slogan was “the majority rules.” That constant and lofty principle ranked right up there with “loser walks” after a touchdown in sandlot football. The bullies and the brats who stamped their feet to get their way did not make the rules. We carried the concept of majority rule into our adult lives and assumed it applied to government as well, but apparently that is no longer the case. Some of our elected representatives would bring down this country in pursuit of their own jihad. The majority no longer rules, and we are all losers as a result. When have we ever had a statute enacted when so many legislators voted their approval and simultaneously voiced their disapproval? The country is in a state of despair — and for good reason. The stock market has obviously given the debt-ceiling “compromise” and the debate leading up to it a flunking grade as has Standard & Poor’s. Wiser voices have spoken about the consequences of the legislation saving the country from its credit default. I am interested and concerned with the process. The undisputed fact is that a minority of the country has taken over its control. Although the cabal may not share blood oaths or secret handshakes, they have their intractable pledges and fanaticism that makes them willing to destroy this country’s and possibly the world’s economy to achieve their ends. By holding up a vote on what had been a traditional rubber stamp for decades by both political parties to raise the debt limit, they sought to extort compliance with their own demands irrespective of the destruction that might ensue if their demands were not met. This conduct strikes at the very foundations of our democracy and the future of our country. The same is true of the use, or rather the abuse, of the filibuster rule and need for a super-majority. The filibuster rule was enacted and reserved for those rare occasions when the minority was so incensed or outraged by legislation or appointments proposed by the majority or the president that it used this rule to defeat them. For years, an actual filibuster was required. Now, no one need stand in the well of the Senate and actually filibuster, the mere threat is sufficient, and the rule is used in a trivial manner to defeat or delay virtually all important legislation or appointments proposed by the majority. (I have previously expressed my ambivalence over the survival of 60 vote rule.) Who can quarrel with noble and popular goals of less government taxes and spending, the reduction of the deficit and the elimination of waste? They are the “Mom and apple pie” of politics. But there is certain hypocrisy in suggesting that this pact not to raise taxes, end or reduce subsidies, loopholes or deductions for the very wealthy is the result of some “grassroots” movement by the public at large. In resisting efforts to raise taxes on the rich and eliminate their deductions, subsidies and loopholes, the argument is made by conservatives that the rich already pay most of the country’s taxes. They argue that a large portion of the nation pays little or no taxes. Therefore, by their own admission, this intractable resistance to raising revenues from the wealthy is not some uprising of the people, but rather for the benefit of those that have rather than those who have not. Apart from the early, classic Tea Party slogan, “Keep the Government out of Our Medicare,” the cry was, “I Want My America Back”. Well, I want MY America back too. Yes, the deficit must be reduced, waste eliminated, spending curtailed, and entitlements reviewed and probably reduced, but we need a government that operates by compromise not coercion. I want an America that builds bridges and hires workers to build them. I want an America that educates its children, feeds its poor, helps the unemployed, cares for its veterans, provides for the elderly and treats the sick who cannot afford it. I want an America that protects its environment, its food supply, its consumers and its borrowers. I want an America that is more concerned about the civil rights of its citizens rather the mythical invasion of Sharia law. What I don’t want is to deny any or all of the foregoing in order to protect the wealth of the wealthiest among us. I want an America that cares as much about its people as it does about its corporations. I want an America that reflects the will of the majority in the decisions it makes and not some small, fringe group that threatens the country and its people in order to achieve its goals. I want an America that is not governed by bullies and brats who insist on making the rules. I want an America in which the rules that governed my childhood playground govern the country as well.
Continue reading …Referencing Michael Moore's absurd tweet that President Obama should arrest the CEO of Standard & Poors for downgrading America's credit rating, CNN's Kyra Phillips actually asked her panel members who they would like to arrest in the fallout of the downgrade. Whether or not the question was serious, Moore's tweet was. On Monday he implored President Obama , via Twitter, to “show some guts” and arrest the CEO of Standard & Poors. “These criminals brought down the economy in 2008& [sic] now they will do it again,” Moore tweeted. [Video below the break.] Moore may or may not have realized that he was imploring President Obama to assume unprecedented dictatorial power in a time of peace. “All right, that's Michael Moore's opinion,” Phillips remarked. She then asked her guests specifically who they would like to see arrested. Whether or not the question was in jest, CNN still held Moore's “opinion” in such regard as to air a discussion over it. Liberal Roland Martin abruptly called for the arrest of “Every single banker, every single credit agency.” “Arrested for what?” a smiling Will Cain exclaimed. “You don't arrest people for being moronic.” A transcript of the segment, which aired on August 9 at 10:33 a.m. EDT, is as follows: KYRA PHILLIPS: All right, here we go, “Buzzer Beater.” Filmmaker Michael Moore – he tweeted out, quote, telling this to the President, “Show some guts and arrest the CEO of S&P. These criminals brought down the economy in 2008, and now they will do it again.” All right, that's Michael Moore's opinion. So guys, who would you want to see arrested over this? Roland? ROLAND MARTIN, CNN political analyst: All of them. Make them all do the perp walk! Every single banker, every single credit agency. Arrest them all, the crooks. PHILLIPS: Will? WILL CAIN, CNN contributor: Arrested for what? Just – I know I've got ten seconds. But let me tell you about the liberal prism of mine and the conserve perception. I think when a liberal looks at the world and sees bad things, they see malevolence and conspiracy. I see morons. You don't arrest people for being moronic. MARTIN: Yes, you do. (Laughter) PHILLIPS: Pete? PETE DOMINICK, comedian: Hold on, Kyra, I'm making a trade to help the Dow go back up. Oh, listen, listen, this is the fault, I say, of all of the senators who voted against the Brown-Kauffman amendment that would have led to the breakup of banks. Wall Street is just doing what they're allowed to get away with. Congress needs to regulate them and create rules they can't break. And by the way, the Italian authorities did raid Standard & Poor's yesterday. MARTIN: Good!
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Don’t say you weren’t warned . I said then and I say now – Michele Bachmann is no laughing matter. Her surge in Iowa may not be a flash in the pan and every time I hear her say, “…When I am elected President” – I reach for the Pepto. Still, the fact remains she’s captivating Iowa right now . If you thought Sarah Palin was bad, just wait for Bachmann. Check out the clip at the top from BillO’s show last night for an example of how she operates. Note how, after ducking questions about how she would handle “entitlement reform,” she leans into Bill and insists on sharing a bit of gossip that cannot be confirmed or denied. She says, confidentially, of course, that she and some others met at the White House with President Obama and when they asked about Medicare, he said “Obamacare.” She sort of expanded on that to suggest that Medicare would devolve into subsidized, means-tested private health insurance. Yes, that’s what Michele Bachmann says the President said. But wait. That’s Paul Ryan’s plan. No worries, Fox viewers, Michele Bachmann creates whatever reality she wants to live in, especially if it stokes anxiety and fear about the scary black man in the Oval Office. That brings me to Ryan Lizza’s fabulous backgrounder on Bachmann in the New Yorker. It’s a 9,000-word masterpiece. And tucked inside, Lizza lets us in on some of Michele Bachmann’s bizarre beliefs. Remember that so-called slavery “gaffe ?” It wasn’t a gaffe. Bachmann’s comment about slavery was not a gaffe. It is, as she would say, a world view. In “Christianity and the Constitution,” the book she worked on with Eidsmoe, her law-school mentor, he argues that John Jay, Alexander Hamilton, and John Adams “expressed their abhorrence for the institution” and explains that “many Christians opposed slavery even though they owned slaves.” They didn’t free their slaves, he writes, because of their benevolence. “It might be very difficult for a freed slave to make a living in that economy; under such circumstances setting slaves free was both inhumane and irresponsible.” What nonsense. Utter and complete baloney. The “Eidsmoe” referred to in that quote is John Eidsmoe, Bachmann’s mentor and professor at Oral Roberts University. Eidsmoe isn’t simply Bachmann’s mentor. John wrote about how Bachmann embraces even his most bizarre beliefs back in June. He sums it up thus: What she’s done like the rest of the social conservatives these days is adopt Ayn Rand and Milton Friedman’s economic theological principles and incorporated them into their many forms of Evangelical Christianity and that will help her in the GOP primary. I would augment that a little with what Alex Pareene wrote on Salon: Even in a post-Glenn Beck world where far-right extremism has become fairly normalized and occasionally embraced by a Republican Party that used to at least act embarrassed about its neo-Confederates and John Birchers and straight-up theocrats, Bachmann’s ideological background is both radically anti-American (in the sense that America is a pluralist nation founded on Enlightenment values and not a pro-slavery Christian theocracy) and way, way outside the “mainstream.” She’s not just a hard-right-winger — and not just a slightly dim “nut” — but a full-on fringe character, a bigot following a bizarre strain of born-againism that even your average American evangelical would find too conspiracy-obsessed and ahistorical to be palatable. Speaking of John Birchers, it seems fairly clear they play a large role in Bachmann’s politics. From Lizza’s article: Around this time, Bachmann became interested in the writings of David A. Noebel, the founder and director of Summit Ministries, an educational organization founded to reverse the harmful effects of what it calls “our current post-Christian culture.” He was a longtime John Birch Society member, whose pamphlets include “The Homosexual Revolution: End Time Abomination,” and “Communism, Hypnotism, and the Beatles,” in which Noebel argued that the band was being used by Communists to infiltrate the minds of young Americans. Bachmann once gave a speech touting her relationship with Noebel’s organization. “I went on to serve on the board of directors with Summit Ministries,” she said, adding that Summit’s message is “wonderful and worthwhile.” She has also recommended to supporters Noebel’s “Understanding the Times,” a book that is popular in the Christian homeschooling movement. And then there is J Steven Wilkins . Wilkins is the leading proponent of the theory that the South was an orthodox Christian nation unjustly attacked by the godless North. This revisionist take on the Civil War, known as the “theological war” thesis, had little resonance outside a small group of Southern historians until the mid-twentieth century, when Rushdoony and others began to popularize it in evangelical circles. In the book, Wilkins condemns “the radical abolitionists of New England” and writes that “most southerners strove to treat their slaves with respect and provide them with a sufficiency of goods for a comfortable, though—by modern standards—spare existence.” African slaves brought to America, he argues, were essentially lucky: “Africa, like any other pagan country, was permeated by the cruelty and barbarism typical of unbelieving cultures.” Echoing Eidsmoe, Wilkins also approvingly cites Lee’s insistence that abolition could not come until “the sanctifying effects of Christianity” had time “to work in the black race and fit its people for freedom.” Here’s a more recent example of Wilkins’ belief structure, from a recent blog post decrying the minimum wage: It works this way: If I’m a business owner, I might be willing to hire 4 unskilled workers at $4.00 per hour until they learn the job and prove themselves capable and dependable and worth a raise. But if you force me to pay a minimum wage of $7.25 per hour, I might hire only two new employees (or I might hire no new employees in hopes that my present workers can take up the slack). S o, instead of having 4 teenagers earning $4.00 per hour, now only two have a job and two have nothing (unemployment increases). But what is especially unspoken (and consequently largely unknown) is that the evil effects of raising the minimum wage hit young black teens the hardest. In 2007 (when the latest hikes in the minimum wage began to be put in place), the unemployment rate among black teens was 29 percent. Today (after the minimum wage hikes) that rate has risen to almost 42 percent. Thanks to the “wisdom” of Congress the number of unemployed black teens is almost 13 percent higher than it was four years ago (according to a report in today’s Wall Street Journal) Got that? Minimum wage raises the unemployment rate of young African-Americans. Because evidently too many employers think…what? Either he’s arguing that the “markets” don’t value the African-American labor force enough to pay them more than slave’s wages (yes, I intended that term), or they’re not worth a minimum wage in the first place. Therefore, we as a society are supposed to reward that by slashing the minimum wage down to pre-1970 levels. It boggles the mind. Perhaps the final and most bizarre Bachmann belief is her slavish devotion to liberty. Liberty defined by Bachmann, anyway. Liberty is the concept—or at least the word—most resonant with the Republican Party’s Tea Party faction, which Bachmann’s Presidential aspirations depend upon. It is a peculiarity of the current political moment that a politician with a history of pushing sectarian religious beliefs in government has become a hero to a libertarian movement. But Bachmann’s merger of these two strands of ideology is not unique. In fact, the Pew Research Center, in its recent quadrennial study of the American electorate, noted that “the most visible shift in the political landscape” since 2005 “is the emergence of a single bloc of across-the-board conservatives. The long-standing divide between economic, pro-business conservatives and social conservatives has blurred.” The two wings are now united by the simplest and most enduring strain of conservative ideology: a dislike and distrust of government. Religious and fiscal conservatives have been moving toward this kind of unity for decades, and Bachmann, in her crusades against abortion, education standards, gay marriage—as well as in her passionate opposition to raising the debt ceiling—has always cast government as the villain, often using terms that echo Schaeffer’s post-Roe warning that America risked falling into the hands of “a manipulative and authoritarian élite.” Which brings me back to the echoes of Richard Nixon I hear in Michele Bachman. Echoes Rick Perlstein wrote about in Nixonland . Even though I’ve quoted it before, it’s worth quoting again: “What Richard Nixon left behind was the very terms of our national self-image: a notion that there are two kinds of Americans. On the one side, the “Silent Majority.” The “nonshouters.” The middle-class, middle American, suburban, exurban, and rural coalition who call themselves, now, “Values voters,” “people of faith,” “patriots,” or even, simply, “Republicans” — and who feel themselves condescended to by snobby opinion-making elites, and who rage about un-Americans, anti-Christians, amoralists, aliens. On the other side are the “liberals,” the “cosmopolitans,” the “intellectuals,” the “professionals” — “Democrats,” who say they see shouting in opposition to injustice as a higher form of patriotism. Or say “live and let live.” Who believe that to have “values” has more to do with a willingness to extend aid to the downtrodden than where, or if, you happen to worship — but who look down on the first category as unwitting dupes of feckless elites who exploit sentimental pieties to aggrandize their wealth, start wars, ruin lives. Both populations — to speak in ideal types — are equally, essentially, tragically American. And both have learned to consider the other not quite American at all. The argument over Richard Nixon, pro and con, gave us the language for this war.” Nixon may have given us the language, but 30-plus years has given them time to refine, polish, and mold it into a candidate who inspires this kind of response: Sitting on the edge of a metal folding chair in a sweltering parking lot, Donna Fouts, 73, doesn’t seem to care that Bachmann planned to vote against the debt-ceiling compromise that would ensure the arrival of her Social Security check and the military benefits owed to her sons and nephews. “Well, I’m sick of all them other politicians that tell me what to do with my life,” she answers. “Something about her tells me to follow her.” Beware Bachmann.
Continue reading …Jon Stewart was left dumbfounded by Standard & Poor’s downgrading of America’s credit rating , not so much by the rationale behind leaving the US with worse credit than Finland, Australia, Singapore, and even the Isle of Man, but by the reaction of financial institutions: “Flushing their money out of stocks…
Continue reading …Sam Seder takes a look at an amazing clip from a large rally against Verizon. More than 40,000 workers — members of the Communications Workers of America and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers — went on strike this week after Verizon refused to even begin to bargain fairly with the workers. The workers on strike include “telephone field technicians, call center workers and cable installers from Massachusetts to Virginia.” Verizon has canceled multiple bargaining sessions and refuses to back down from any of their original concession requests, something that flies in the face of the basic idea of negotiating. Workers say they are prepared to return to work as soon as management shows a willingness to sit down and work out a fair agreement. There is no need for Verizon to pursue the level of cuts to compensation for their workers that they are after. Verizon had a $6 billion profit last year (on revenues of $108 billion ) and just paid a $10 billion dividend. Over the last four years, the company has a total of more than $19 billion in profits . Verizon’s profits not only make them one of the richest and most successful companies in the country, they are outperforming the overall communications industry . The company’s chair, Ivan Seidenberg makes more than 300 times what the average Verizon worker makes. The top five executives have been paid more than $250 million in the past four years. On top of all this, it turns out Verizon not only paid $0 in federal taxes last year, they also received $1 billion in subsidies. Verizon is looking for $1 billion in concessions , an average of $20,000 per family that is supported by a Verizon worker, and will not back down from any of their demands. The workers, on the other hand, have shown a willingness to make concessions , particularly when it comes to health care benefits. The extreme concessions Verizon is seeking include: -Continued contracting out of work to low-wage contractors, which means more outsourcing of good jobs overseas. -Eliminating disability benefits for workers injured while on the job. -Elimination of all job security provisions. -Eliminating paid sick days for new hires and limiting them to no more than five for any workers. -Freezing pensions for current workers and eliminating them for future employees. -Replacing the current high-quality health care plan with a high-deductible plan requiring up to $6,800 in additional costs. Verizon’s attack on its workers is not new . In recent years, it has cut is percentage of unionized jobs nearly in half. The company has also outsourced more than 25,000 jobs . Verizon’s cell phone division is mostly non-union . The assault on Verizon’s workers is part of a larger battle taking place across the country , where conservatives in government and business are blaming unions and working families for larger problems that unions either have nothing to do with or the alleged problems don’t even exist. Corporate profits are at the highest proportion of the national income that has ever been recorded, and they continue to increase. At the same time, the percentage of national income that makes up wages has slipped below 50 percent of the overall total for the first time in recorded history, and the decline goes on. Not surprisingly, Verizon is an active member of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) , the same organization behind the assaults on unions in numerous states. There are a number of ways you can get involved of follow the developments in the strike: Find picket lines to participate in if you are in the area. Take action via the CWA website or AFL-CIO’s web site Read more about the strike directly from the CWA . You can keep up with the events on Twitter at @VZLaborfacts or by following the hashtag #verizonstrike. Learn more on Facebook as well. Watch even more in-depth video of the protests:
Continue reading …Sometimes it seems as if everything that ever happened in America happened in a bar. While that might border on hyperbole, it’s stunning to think of the role taverns, saloons and bars played in shaping America, before even the Revolution. In early days, the tavern wasn’t just where you went to get a drink, it was where you went to find out the news, decide town matters, vote and even settle judicial business–both in and “out of court.” We know why the bar started out as such a powerful institution (it was the only game in town in early colonial days), but the reason it continued to play a central role had a lot to do with the booze. The tavern or saloon is where people got together and bonded over their problems, accelerated by the warming properties of beer, wine and spirits. No wonder it came to play such a prominent role in the American Revolution, Democratic politics, labor reform, gay rights, and even the very structure of the American family. Cheers to it!
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