Photo: Consumer Energy Reports A new study from the RAND Corporation claims that the US military will see no direct benefits in adopting alternative fuels — but that benefits will “accrue to the nation as a whole”, according to Science Daily . The report looked primarily at jet fuel alternatives like algal and ethanol-based fuel — and determined that funding would be better spent on efficiency measures instead. … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Photo: Zimbio As per usual, the intertubes are awash with speculation of what President Obama will say during his State of the Union address — along with plenty of friendly advice on what he should say, too! And who am I to sit on the sidelines while the internet chatters away? Here’s my two cents: Obama should use the momentum from a recent uptick in the polls and take the opportunity to talk firmly about the realities of climate change — and how American innovation is more than able to tackle the problem, while creat… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …enlarge So a week or so ago, Freddie deBoer wrote a widely-cited post bemoaning the lack of an actual pro-labor left among most widely read liberal blogs. Instead what we have is mostly a neoliberal consensus that supports many of the same things that neoliberal presidents such as Bill Clinton and Barack Obama support: Free trade, an interventionist foreign policy and public-private “partnerships” such as the 2010 health care bill that outsources what should be a public good (health care) to private entities (insurance companies). Deregulation of the financial services industry was until recently a staple of this ideology, but it’s fallen out of vogue for extremely obvious reasons. Michael Lind has a very good breakdown of neoliberalism and its grip on the leaderships of the both Republicans and Democrats: Neoliberals continue to believe that at home governments should provide basic public goods like infrastructure, healthcare and security by “market-friendly” methods, which in practice means vouchers, tax incentives or government contracts for for-profit corporations. Because trade by definition is supposed to be a force for progress, neoliberals see little role for government in trade beyond promoting trade liberalization, providing a business-friendly infrastructure and educating citizens to equip them to compete in the supposed global labor market of tomorrow. That’s not to say there aren’t differences between Republican neoliberals and Democratic neoliberals. For instance, Republican neoliberals believe that rich people are magical wealth-creating leprechauns who must be fawned over and showered with tax cuts and free money from the Federal Reserve lest they get sad and leave us all forever. Democratic neoliberals, on the other hand, believe that rich people are magical wealth-creating leprechauns who should be allowed to do whatever they want but who should also pay for slightly higher taxes so that the government can afford to do things like pave roads and whatnot. But despite these differences, you’ll notice that both sects have a critical flaw in their thinking: That is, that rich people are magical wealth-creating leprechauns who should more or less be free to do whatever they want and that the only thing worth arguing about is their marginal tax rates. The reason that this ideology has so much influence over both party establishments is screamingly obvious, i.e., ” CREAM / Get th’ money / dolla-dolla bill y’all .” Take a look at the big brain on Evan Bayh for example : In 2010, Sen. Evan Bayh retired. Part of the reason, he told me, was that the corrosive effect of money in politics had left his profession looking corrupt. “You want to be engaged in an honorable line of work,” Bayh said, “but they look at us like we’re worse than used-car salesmen.” On Friday, Bayh announced that he was joining Apollo Global Management, a private-equity megafirm, as “a senior adviser with responsibility for public policy.” Something tells me that this isn’t going to vastly improve the way Americans think about their politicians. It ain’t, but that’s not the point. The point is, well, money, cash, hoes, money, cash, hoes , etc. Jon Chait says that he’s not too worried about the fact that there isn’t much of an actual left in America to stir up s— for workers’ rights, presumably because he’s been to France and he knows what a pain in the ass it can be to go to the Louvre and have the whole impressionist wing closed off because the workers are on strike. But maybe, just maybe, left-wing ideas should have more influence in this country. Why? Because the essential neoliberal insight that rich people are magical wealth-generating leprechauns hasn’t done us all that much good. Mostly because of stuff like this (click to enlarge): enlarge See that? The top 10% of income earners now have a greater share of national income than they did in the run up to the Great Depression. There’s also this: enlarge Since the ’70s real wages for most people in this country have remained flat while wages for the well-off have gone up significantly. It’s tough to argue for trickle-down economics when the money isn’t trickling down very much. My point is this: Yes, punching hippies can be fun. But maybe, just maybe, you should consider that hippies weren’t the ones who decided that the United States should deregulate its financial sector or place the country into a state of permanent warfare. Because to me, those things are slightly more destructive to our national interest than someone listening to too many Phish bootlegs.
Continue reading …Tea Party favorite and one of the leaders of the lunatic fringe, Michelle Bachmann is going to give her own response to President Obama’s SOTU Tuesday night after Paul Ryan gives the GOP’s sanctioned rebuttal. She’ll be streaming it on the Tea Party Express website. Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wisc.) is delivering the official rebuttal to President Obama’s State of the Union next week. But, thanks to technology and the tea party movement, it won’t be the only Republican response. In concert with Tea Party Express, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) is delivering her own post-speech message . Ryan’s response will air on national television after Obama’s speech; Bachmann’s will be streamed on the Tea Party Express Web site. The news was announced in a fund-raising email. Bachmann founded a Tea Party Caucus in Congress, and Tea Party Express named her a “hero” in the 2010 election . Founded by former House Majority Leader Dick Armey, Tea Party Express is more closely aligned with the Republican establishment than some other conservative activist organizations. The media should completely ignore this “beg for attention” from another craven narcissistic wingnut Tuesday night because it sets a new precedent. If the media does cover her inappropriate exercise ( I expect FOX News to give her plenty of airtime because they can never have enough free market propaganda filling our airwaves) then it will open up the flood gates for any politician to try to get a ton of publicity when it’s not earned. Remember, the right wing can never say anything too controversial for the media and can make shit up whenever they please. As Rick Perlstein pointed out in possibly the best post of 2010: We live in a mendocracy. As in: rule by liars. Political scientists are going crazy crunching the numbers to uncover the skeleton key to understanding the Republican victory last Tuesday. But the only number that matters is the one demonstrating that by a two-to-one margin likely voters thought their taxes had gone up, when, for almost all of them, they had actually gone down. Republican politicians, and conservative commentators, told them Barack Obama was a tax-mad lunatic. They lied. The mainstream media did not do their job and correct them. The White House was too polite—”civil,” just like Obama promised—to say much. So people believed the lie. From this all else follows. And it was all too predictable. Consider February 24, 2009, when, after four glowing weeks in office, Obama delivered his first, triumphant, address to a joint session of Congress. Two weeks earlier, he had signed the $700 billion stimulus bill. This was his speech defending it. That was the one in which Governor Bobby Jindal of Louisiana, looking like a cross between a deer in the headlights and a 10-year-old delivering a prize school report, delivered the Republican response. You remember! He singled out for excoriation the $140 million in stimulus spending “for something called ‘volcano monitoring’”; this happened to be about a month before a volcano erupted, releasing a 60,000 foot cloud of ash near—dot dot dot—Wasilla, Alaska. On CNN, David Brooks followed Jindal. He called the governor’s “stale, government-is-the problem” rhetoric “a disaster for the Republican Party,” and excoriated those who insisted on hugging tight to it as “insane.” The people appeared to agree. In a snap poll, 92 percent of those surveyed had a positive reaction to Obama’s speech—68 percent a very positive reaction. Only 8 percent had a negative reaction. The next morning I tuned in to Rush Limbaugh. I was fascinated to see how the hell he might respond. Like a deer in the headlights? Not quite. The first caller, though a self-professed ditto-head, took objection to Rush’s argument that Obama had revealed himself in the speech as a tax-and-spend liberal. The caller quoted Obama’s words: “Because of this plan, 95 percent of the working households in America will receive a tax cut—a tax cut that you will see in your paychecks beginning on April 1.” (Which was true: People did.) Rush responded, fluidly and without a gram of doubt. “Pay no attention to what Obama says. He means the opposite in most cases. What he says is irrelevant.” So the guy to whom all Republicans must kowtow on pain of political death had just laid down a marker that everything Obama said was a lie. What if the White House had in those months in early 2009 put in the rhetorical forefront a story about Rush’s tens of millions of listeners, and all politicians who refused to denounce Rush, were effectively saying anything the Chief Constitutional Officer of the United States said was a priori a diabolical lie? But Obama didn’t. That would be the “old politics of division.” Not Obama’s bag. This would have been one of many opportunities to wedge the opposition between the authoritarian nihilists and the “constructive” Republicans who had America’s best interests at heart. Instead, the nihilists got to tell the story that endures in the day-after punditry from last Tuesday: that the electorate “rejected Obama’s agenda.” The vector worked, and works, like this: (a) A mountebank teaches his millions of followers that everything the president says is a priori a lie; b) The mainstream media that acts as if anything his millions of followers believe is a priori deserving of respect as heartland folk wisdom (note the cover article lionizing Limbaugh in this week’s Newsweek); (c) The president unilaterally renders himself constitutionally incapable of breaking the chain between (a) and (b), such that, (d), the assumption that Obama raised taxes when he really lowered them becomes hegemonic for a majority of the electorate, and even a large plurality of Democrats. Q.E.D.: Governing has become impossible. When one side breaks the social contract, and the other side makes a virtue of never calling them out on it, the liar always wins. When it becomes “uncivil” to call out liars, lying becomes free. So you find him at a press conference, the day after the midterm elections, saying with all apparent sincerity that he agreed the majority of Americans participated in a “fundamental rejection of his agenda”—who, that is, implicitly believe he raised their taxes. When he really lowered them. Governing has become impossible. That is unless you’re a Republican. remeber, President Obaam came into office with a mandate to change things. yes, he failed in many ways stratigically, but instead of the media pointing out that he won a brutall two year election cycle, they facilitated the party of no by never holding them up to the standards that the Democratic Party would have been held up to. Lying by Republicans in politics to the Americna people has become the norm and the current media establishment are the enablers they’ve been waiting for ever since Spiro Agnew uttered these famous words penned by William Safire. T he Nattering Nabobs of Negativity Penned by speechwriter William Safire, the “nattering nabobs of negativity” was the phrase used by former Vice President, Spiro Agnew , to refer to the “liberal” media. Agnew had reason to discourage press scrutiny: not only was he in the Nixon administration, but he would later be convicted of tax evasion and money laundering in connection to bribes he took as governor of Maryland. The press knows it’s place now and America be damned.
Continue reading …Bill Maher on Friday once again demonstrated how little he knows about politics and current events. In a discussion about House Republicans voting last week to repeal ObamaCare, the “Real Time” host said that law's individual mandate is constitutional because states require people to own car insurance (video follows with transcript and commentary): DAVID STOCKMAN: Republicans have had numerous bad ideas over the last couple of decades, and that’s one of them. BILL MAHER, HOST: Why was that a bad idea? I mean, the personal mandate, it was a, it was a, I'll tell you why it was a Republican… STEVE MOORE, WALL STREET JOURNAL: The government can't require you to buy health insurance. It’s not constitutional. There’s nothing in the Constitution that has the government forcing you to buy something. Should they force you to buy, you know… MAHER: Car insurance? They do. MOORE: Yeah, but they can't force you to buy a car, right? MAHER: No, that’s not the same thing a car and car insurance. Those are two different things. They can force you to buy car insurance that puts you in, okay. Set that aside. That's right: a car and car insurance aren't the same thing, and states can only force you to buy one if you own and intend to drive the other. As such, states that have this law don't force people to buy car insurance. Instead, since driving is a privilege and not a right, most states require car owners to purchase liability insurance that protects other people from damages caused by the at-fault driver. However, states do not require drivers to have what's called collision and comprehensive insurance. Such policies cover damages to one's own vehicle and property. This makes the auto insurance requirement a benefit of others and not the actual insured. By contrast, health insurance is exclusively a benefit to the buyer of it. This makes it far different than automobile liability insurance. Sadly, like so many liberal media members, Maher doesn't understand these distinctions. Isn't it great that he gets to share his tremendously uninformed views with the masses once a week on a nationally televised cable show?
Continue reading …On Thursday, Georgia Republican Congressman Paul Broun insisted he would not sit with Democrats during next week’s State of the Union address when “Barack Obama spews his venom.” That’s quite a charge, coming as it does from a man who equated health care reform to the ” War of Yankee Aggression “, compared President Obama to Adolf Hitler and Karl Marx, and warned Democrats would declare martial law. Broun’s latest tirade came in response to a radio talk show caller who requested “you would ask the Republicans in the Senate and House to not take the bait and sit with the Democrats in the State of the Union speech.” “I agree with you wholeheartedly…And sitting together being kissy kissy is just another way to try to silence Republicans and also to show, to keep the American people from seeing how few of them there are in the US House now, and when people stand up to what the Democrats are doing when Barack Obama spews his venom, then if they’re scattered throughout the Republicans, it won’t be as noticeable if the Republicans sit apart.” As it turns out, it was Broun who began spewing his poison at the President before Barack Obama had taken the oath of office. Just days after the 2008 election , Politico reported, Broun said “he fears that President-elect Obama will establish a Gestapo-like security force to impose a Marxist dictatorship.” “It may sound a bit crazy and off base, but the thing is, he’s the one who proposed this national security force,” Rep. Paul Broun said of Obama in an interview Monday with The Associated Press. “I’m just trying to bring attention to the fact that we may — may not, I hope not — but we may have a problem with that type of philosophy of radical socialism or Marxism.” “That’s exactly what Hitler did in Nazi Germany and it’s exactly what the Soviet Union did,” Broun said. “When he’s proposing to have a national security force that’s answering to him, that is as strong as the U.S. military, he’s showing me signs of being Marxist.” By August 2009, the Tea Party and Bircher favorite and self-proclaimed “freedom fighter” added Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid to his warnings about a coming declaration of martial law : He also spoke of a “socialistic elite” – Obama, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid – who might use a pandemic disease or natural disaster as an excuse to declare martial law. “They’re trying to develop an environment where they can take over,” he said. “We’ve seen that historically.” That September, Broun again decried President Obama’s supposed authoritarian streak . He told a meeting of the Morgan County Republicans on Wednesday night that Obama already has or will have the three things he needs to make himself a dictator: a national police force, gun control and control over the press. “He has the three things that are necessary to establish an authoritarian government,” Broun said. “And so we need to be ever-vigilant, because freedom is precious.” On health care in particular, Dr, Broun has been especially vituperative. In October 2009, Broun joined Paul Ryan, Sarah Palin and the long list of Republicans calling for the privatization of Medicare . That same month, Broun echoed Mitch McConnell, Tom Delay and President George W. Bush in claiming that no one is denied health care in America because “you just go to an emergency room.” As ThinkProgress recalled: One of the most radical opponents of health care reform is Rep. Paul Broun (R-GA). He has said that a public option would “kill people.” Last Tuesday, Broun was confronted by a constituent at a health care town hall who explained that he has gone into debt because he can’t afford insurance for his major depressive disorder. In response to his constituent’s story, Broun said that “people who have depression, who have chronic diseases in this country…can always get care in this country by going to the emergency room.” Of course, health care is worst in precisely those states where Republicans poll best . Nevertheless, as the health care reform debate reached its climax in March, Broun took to the House floor to show that he is still fighting the Civil War : “If ObamaCare passes, that free insurance card that’s in people’s pockets is gonna be as worthless as a Confederate dollar after the War Between The States — the Great War of Yankee Aggression.” (With his nostalgia for the antebellum South, Broun has plenty of company among the neo-Confederates of the Republican Party .) In the aftermath of his jaw-dropping November 2008 remarks about President-elect Obama, Paul Broun explained : “You have to remember that Adolf Hitler was elected in a democratic Germany. I’m not comparing him to Adolf Hitler. What I’m saying is there is the potential of going down that road.” And the man who yesterday accused President Obama of spewing venom added the usual faux apology : “I apologize to anybody that’s taken offense at that…I’m taking a wait-and-see attitude. I’m not throwing any stones.” (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)
Continue reading …Randall Terry’s announcement that he will challenge Barack Obama in the Democratic primaries isn’t being taken seriously, but to me, it’s dangerous. Here’s an example of why: “America has never truly debated child killing, because America has never truly seen child killing,” insisted Terry. “We will use FEC and FCC laws for federal candidates to bring America face to face with this massacre of the innocents.” It’s not the threat of using FEC and FCC laws. It’s the “massacre of the innocents” language. This is a perfect example of how to stir up people who are already disturbed and incite them to violence . In a different time and place, it wouldn’t be quite so disturbing. But in today’s world, we have Fox News and a myriad of print/internet outlets willing to pretend Terry is a serious contender. All he wants is the platform, and challenging the president in Democratic primaries gives that to him. “Will I defeat Mr. Obama? I’m not delusional,” said Terry. “But while I may not defeat him, I can expose the genocide Obama promotes in America and around the world. ” Terry added that his campaign had two goals which were creating “a crisis of conscience for Americans regarding the slaughter of the unborn and thereby hasten the end of legalized child killing” and attacking “President Obama’s agenda starting with child killing, but also including our battle against socialism, our enslavement to debt, and more. ” Fighting words. Fire in a crowded room. Was there no lesson learned from the assassination of Dr. Tiller? Just to make sure he gets as much attention as possible, he’s planning to make his formal announcement in front of the Holocaust museum. No symbolism there, none at all. I’m certain Terry will actually get some assistance from the Catholic Church and Southern Baptists, which means that the 2012 campaign just got more dangerous for the president. But Fox News will surely be more profitable, so there’s that. Here’s a sample of Randall Terry quotes from the past. I’m sure we’ll get some really great ones in 2012, too. “I want you to just let a wave of intolerance wash over you… I want you to let a wave of hatred wash over you. Yes, hate is good… Our goal is a Christian nation. We have a biblical duty, we are called by God, to conquer this country. We don’t want equal time. We don’t want pluralism.” “When I, or people like me, are running the country, you’d better flee, because we will find you, we will try you and we will execute you.” ["reportedly said of doctors who perform abortions"]
Continue reading …Former dean of the White House press corps Helen Thomas delivered some candid remarks Monday on CNN's “Situation Room.” Thomas, who last year retired from Hearst for telling Israelis to “get the hell out of Palestine” and go back to their former lands, railed against what she viewed as America unequivocally protecting Israel. On Friday the Society of Professional Journalists announced that, in light of that controversy, it would “retire” the lifetime achievement award that bears her name. “I could call President Obama anything in the book, and no one would say anything. You touch one thing about Israel and you're finished,” Thomas groused. CNN's “Situation Room” ran a segment on the 90 year-old journalist Monday afternoon, reporting that Thomas, who currently works for the Falls Church News-Press, is pushing to regain her status as a White House correspondent.
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