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Tucker Carlson uses winter storm on East Coast to attack climate science: ‘This is of course a religion’

Click here to view this media It’s not hard to see why Tucker Carlson inspires such visceral dislike from the likes of sane people such as Jon Stewart. It’s the way he wraps the dumbest propagandistic crap in such smug preppy smarm. Like earlier this week, filling in for Hannity on his Fox News show: There’s Carlson hosting a segment on global warming, pretending — as Fox anchors did all last winter, too — that those severe storms are somehow proof, as Hannity himself puts it, that “global warming is a fraud” or other denialist nonsense. It’s obvious, right off the bat, that Carlson either doesn’t know, or doesn’t want his audience to know, that climate is not the same thing as weather, and that global warming means just that — it’s a global phenomenon, and not just an Eastern Coast of the United States phenomenon: Carlson: But despite the frigid temperatures and record snowfall this season, global warming true believers are still trying to spin the weather. Carlson seems to have trouble grasping a simple principle: Global warming means more severe seasonal storms, precisely because it is putting more moisture into the air. Indeed, one of his guests, Betsy Rosenberg, tries to explain this to him, but Carlson is just too intent on forcing his spin onto everyone else. Carlson: You know, I was interested to hear Betsy use the term biblical, because this is of course a religion, and one with particularly fervent believers. … Then he closes with a particularly snide shot: Carlson: Good luck with your religion, I hope your spaceship lands. Of course, Carlson is just keeping up the tradition at Fox of lying to its audience 24/7, especially when it comes to global warming. But he really seems to enjoy being a complete dick about it.

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Russell Pearce gears up to push birthright-citizenship bill — while Arizona crumbles

Click here to view this media Our favorite neo-Nazi-friendly legislator , Arizona’s own Russell Pearce, has been hankering to revoke Latinos’ birthright citizenship for a long time. But now he’s actually the president of the Arizona State Senate — which means he has real power. And with SB1070 under his belt, he’s ready to roll — not just in Arizona, but nationally. Interestingly, a recent Arizona Republic editorial actually begged him not to, considering that it’s not going to do a thing to help Arizona get out of its budget crisis: With Arizona facing huge shortfalls, this is no time for distractions. It’s hard to imagine a worse distraction than trying to write our own rules on citizenship. Unfortunately, Senate President-elect Russell Pearce is a keen promoter of trying to reinterpret the 14th Amendment, which establishes birthright citizenship, through state law. Never mind that the U.S. Constitution is completely outside the jurisdiction of state legislators. Or that the state faces its worst financial crisis ever. This is like calling the fire department when your house is in flames – and the firefighters responding by rushing to Washington, D.C., to spray water on the Capitol. There are wiser perspectives among the incoming legislators. Some senators supported Pearce, a Mesa Republican, for the top leadership job with the understanding that he wouldn’t file a birthright bill. That was, it turns out, more than a bit naive. Because there’s nothing to stop someone else from dropping such legislation. “I never pledged not to hear the bill,” Pearce said in a recent Editorial Board meeting. “Will I facilitate it getting passed? Yes, I will.” Pearce claims that Arizona suffered no harm from Senate Bill 1070, his last do-it-yourself immigration-enforcement job. That’s not what business people say. Arizona is still suffering from the economic damage, not to mention the bitter divisions, of that misguided law. The consequences – the opportunities lost, the long-lasting stain on our image – will stretch on for years. In other words, Pearce pulled a fast one on his fellow Republicans in order to win the Senate presidency. Because yesterday, there he was on Fox’s Your World with guest host Brian Sullivan, not only touting the bill essentially as his project — and vowing to unveil it as a national project: SULLIVAN: You are not keeping this in the Arizona borders. You are announcing this at the National Press Club, right, next week. PEARCE: Yes. Yes. (CROSSTALK) SULLIVAN: Why do this on a national stage? PEARCE: Well, because we have about 18 states that have joined us in this effort, a coalition of 18 states that agree with us. Others do, too. They just don`t think they can pass it through their congress or — I mean, their legislative bodies. So we actually have the majority of Americans on this issue on our side, too. The polls show 62 percent to 70 percent of Americans know that birthright citizenship is unconstitutional, that the practice ought to be stopped. What you`re doing, you are inducing — it is against the law to enter the United States in violation of federal law. And it`s against law to remain here without permission. And yet we induce you to break the law. It is absolutely outrageous. The common sense… The best part is that Pearce openly admits that his strategy is intended to draw the state of Arizona into costly litigation when the inevitable lawsuits arrive, with the hope that they will be able to get the Supreme Court to overturn its previous rulings making clear the 14th Amendment grants citizenship to anyone born on American soil. As he told Sullivan: PEARCE: So we know they will sue. That is a given. They sue you on everything. They don`t want the laws enforced. Their support for anarchists and for the — and for destruction of the rule of law is outrageous. Somewhat secondarily, we all saw how the fight over SB1070 became a nexus for right-wing extremist activity, to the point that it’s now abundantly clear that Arizona has a white-supremacist problem, maybe even more substantial than Idaho’s in its heyday. This bill will only pour gasoline on that particular bonfire. All in the service of Russell Pearce’s self-promoting ego. Arizonans and their budget can go to the devil for all he cares. He has a national image to promote.

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Tucker Carlson: Michael Vick should have been executed

Click here to view this media When President Barack Obama praised the NFL’s Eagles for giving quarterback Michael Vick a second chance, it was inevitable that the pundits at Fox News would feign outrage. But no one could have predicted that one Fox News host would go as far as to call for Vick’s death. “President Obama — it has been confirmed by the White House — called the owner of the Philadelphia Eagles and during the course of their conversation, thanked him for giving Michael Vick a second chance,” Fox News’ Tucker Carlson reported Tuesday while filling in for Sean Hannity. “Now, I’m a Christian. I’ve made mistakes myself. I believe fervently in second chances but Michael Vick killed dogs and he did it in a heartless and cruel way and I think, personally, he should have been executed for that,” he continued. “But the idea that the president of the United States would be getting behind someone who murdered dogs, kind of beyond the pale,” Carlson said. Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie told Sports Illustrated ‘s Peter King Monday that Obama called him and was passionate about Vick’s comeback. “He said, ‘So many people who serve time never get a fair second chance,’” Lurie said. “He said, ‘It’s never a level playing field for prisoners when they get out of jail.’ And he was happy that we did something on such a national stage that showed our faith in giving someone a second chance after such a major downfall.” White House spokesman Bill Burton clarified that Obama “of course condemns the crimes that Michael Vick was convicted of, but, as he’s said previously, he does think that individuals who have paid for their crimes should have an opportunity to contribute to society again.” Burton also said that part of the reason for Obama’s call was to talk about alternative energy plans for Lincoln Field, where the Eagles play. Carlson wasn’t the first Fox News host to be be upset by the president’s actions. “The criticism is to specifically praise giving Michael Vick this kind of a chance in some way excuses, perhaps, what Michael Vick did or sends some sort of a message to people that it’s not that bad,” Fox News host Megyn Kelly worried . Filling in for Keith Olbermann on MSNBC Tuesday, Sam Seder pointed out that while Obama didn’t excuse what Vick did, President George W. Bush did excuse I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby after he was convicted in the Valerie Plame case. “Tell me if I’m wrong here,” Seder asked sociologist Dr. Michael Eric Dyson. “In the media, at least, it seems to me that there appears to be two standards for two different crimes and for two different presidents.” “You’re absolutely right,” Dyson said.

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N.Y. Times Downplayed Clapper ABC Gaffe — No Critics, Only Pals Who Found It ‘Deeply Misleading’

Yesterday, we reviewed how other national networks skipped out on ABC’s accidental discovery in an interview last week that James Clapper, Obama’s director of national intelligence, had no clue about London terror arrests that had been splashed all over TV that day. Several newspapers picked up the story on December 23, but they were all stocked only with chummy Clapper supporters trying to undo the damage. Scott Shane’s article in the December 23 New York Times (headlined “White House Rallies Round National Intelligence Chief”) was mostly a White House recounting of why no one should be alarmed by Clapper’s ignorance. Readers were told the gaffe was “deeply misleading.” Shane began: “The Obama administration scrambled on Wednesday to undo the damage from an ABC News clip that appeared to show that James R. Clapper Jr., the director of national intelligence, was clueless on Monday about terrorism arrests in Britain that had been a major news story for hours.” The scrambling paid off, because the Times quoted no one scolding Clapper, even the liberals who scolded him on MSNBC. It was all damage control: read more

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Save Us From Our Devices

By Ruth Marcus Mr. Speaker, please don’t. Go ahead, if you must, and cut taxes. Slash spending. Repeal health care. I understand. Elections have consequences. But BlackBerrys and iPads and laptops on the House floor? Reconsider, before it’s too late. Related Entries December 28, 2010 A Reality Check for the GOP December 27, 2010 The Game-Changer List

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By Amy Goodman President Barack Obama signed a slew of bills into law and was dubbed the “Comeback Kid” amidst a flurry of fawning press reports. In the hail of this surprise bipartisanship, though, the one issue over which Democrats and Republicans always agree, war, was completely ignored. Related Entries December 28, 2010 A Reality Check for the GOP December 27, 2010 The Game-Changer List

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Suzanne Malveaux Asks Bill Bennett What ‘Tough Choices’ Americans Are Willing to Make to Reduce the Deficit

Click here to view this media After Republicans just insisted on blowing another huge hole in the budget with the extension of these Bush tax cuts, CNN’s Suzanne Malveaux asks Bill Bennett what “tough choices” Americans are going to be willing to make in order to reduce the deficit. Of course, that sacrifice is only going to be asked of the working class and not the rich. Bennett pretends this is going to go over better with the public if there’s a bipartisan effort to put the screws to the most vulnerable citizens in the country. I’ve got news for you, pal: It’s not. I wonder what “shared sacrifice” Bill Bennett is willing to make for his country to keep the deficit under control? MALVEAUX: Let’s start with the CNN/Opinion Research Corporation poll. You’ve got two-thirds of folks who say, look, we’re very concerned about the federal deficit, cutting this, and we’ve got eight out of 10 who say we don’t approve of earmarks. But put it up against some of the tough choices that Americans are willing to make here and it doesn’t look like they’re willing to make those tough choices. Up against Social Security. When it comes to which is more important, reducing the deficit or preventing cuts in Social Security, 19 percent to 78 percent. Medicare, the same kind of numbers, reducing deficit, 19 percent. Preventing cuts in Medicare, 79 percent. And then taxes, when you take a look at the taxes, increase the federal deficit to pay for tax changes and unemployment benefits, 41 percent favor, 57 percent opposed. So what do Republicans do? Ho do you square this when Americans themselves are not willing to make those tough choices to reduce the deficit. BENNETT: A couple of points, Suzanne. I think this is pretty typical. You ask people, do you want to cut the deficit? Yes. Is the deficit problem serious? Yes. Well, how about cutting this program? No, don’t want to cut that one. Well, how about cutting this program? Don’t want to cut that one. So that’s been the case historically in most surveys. The second point, the argument hasn’t really been made yet, I don’t think. Look, Barack Obama has spent a lot of money. Whether you agree with that spending or not, this has been a big spending administration. George Bush spent a lot of money too. So we haven’t had a president come forward with a Congress and say, look, these deficits get further out of control, we’re going to go bankrupt as a country. I don’t think the argument has been made yet, so I think it’s premature. Third, most of the plans I’ve seen, like Paul Ryan’s roadmap and some of the other plans, the deficit commission, the bipartisan deficit commission plan, talks about cuts in the future. You announce the Social Security people, for example, they’re not going to be cut now, but if you’re below 50 or 55, we are going to raise the age and cut benefits based on means testing. MALVEAUX: And you would support that? BENNETT: I would, but I would also support other reforms as well. It depends — a lot depends on next spring, how the arguments are made, whether Democrats and Republicans can make them together. I think they can. I hope they do. MALVEAUX: How severe would you say those cuts should be in, say, Social Security? BENNETT: Let’s just think of this — supposing you took the Barack Obama budget which proposes $3.8 trillion — that’s the 201 budget — George Bush’s budget in 2008 was — or, yes, the 2008 budget was $2.9 trillion. That’s — if you froze it, if you froze the 2011 budget, 2008 levels, you would save almost $1 trillion. And I don’t think anybody would say — could fairly say 2008 was a hardship time. But if you just went back that far — and this, again, is the most bipartisan of all approaches, which his you freeze everything. So everybody’s dog gets less of a bone. That, I think, would save a lot of money and is doable. MALVEAUX: You’ve got a couple of folks, obviously the incoming House Speaker, Boehner, who’s talking about he sees about $100 billion that perhaps could be saved. You’ve got Senator Coburn, who is saying perhaps $200 billion. A lot of Republicans are saying, you know what? You’ve got to make cuts in education. You were a former education secretary. Do you think that’s the right approach? Do you think there are areas that this country can cut in education. And now’s the time? BENNETT: Well, I certainly think you could absorb some in the Education Department. I like Arne Duncan, by the way, and think he’s doing some very good things. But they had a part of the stimulus package that was $100 billion. My entire budget when I was education secretary — I know it’s ancient history, but it was $14 billion. I mean, it’s way, way up. So, yes, I think you could cut education by a substantial amount. But forget singling out education. Do the freeze of 2008 levels. You save almost $1 trillion. But here’s the point — in the spring, we make this argument together, as Democrats or Republicans, or the argument could be made that we will all be undone and the country will be undone. We cannot sustain what we’re doing. MALVEAUX: Let’s talk about the lame-duck session of Congress really quickly here. BENNETT: Sure. MALVEAUX: Obviously, the president, on his wish list for Christmas, he got tax cuts for the middle class; a repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”; also the New START treaty; health benefits for 911 responders. On the Republican side, they got the tax cuts for all, including the wealthiest Americans, and also didn’t have to swallow that huge budget omnibus bill, the whole enchilada. A poll shows here that the approval ratings for the lame-duck session, Obama comes out on top, 56 percent; Democrats, 44 percent; Republicans 42. Who do you think won in December? BENNETT: Close. We — partisan hat on. We clearly won in November. I think everyone will say that with those elections. MALVEAUX: Right, the shellacking. BENNETT: But I think — and he admitted it — but I think December, he had a pretty good December. I think that’s right. Surprisingly, they didn’t get the big one, the big enchilada, as you called it, the omnibus. But he did get “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” he did get the START treaty. Now, not that everybody’s all focused on that, but he did get that and that mattered. “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” really did matter to him. I still think that budget deal is more a win for Republicans than Democrats. But there are obviously things in there the Democrats wanted. The big question before us now is who wins in January and February and March? As one of my callers said, “I hope it’s the country and I hope folks can work together.” MALVEAUX: All right, Bill. You were true to your word. You did the red, the blue. You were pretty fair, I think. I think you did both sides. BENNETT: Yes. I don’t know if I liked it, but OK. MALVEAUX: All right. Thank you, Bill. BENNETT: Thank you.

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I’m getting pretty tired of this. For starters, I didn’t exactly ask to be born in the late 50s. But I was. Given a choice, I’d just as soon not be one of the biggest generations born in the US. I’d rather stay in my corner and be creative. Like it or not, though, I am a Baby Boomer. And lately, that means I’m viewed as a piggy citizen who wants more than my fair share at the expense of…gasp! My children. And my future grandchildren, of course. This is the Village Wisdom, of course. Instead of dealing with reality, it’s far easier to set up a generational battle between us and our children over who might be more entitled to a future without a ballooning deficit by suggesting Boomers take the hit now in order to make it nicer for everyone else. There has been much brave talk recently, from Republicans and Democrats alike, about reducing budget deficits and controlling government spending. The trouble is that hardly anyone admits that accomplishing these goals must include making significant cuts in Social Security and Medicare benefits for baby boomers. Bullsh*t. Love the “hardly anyone admits” sentence there, stated as if it were fact that no one in their right mind disputes. This is how they do things. They state things as fact which are not fact, in order to make us think it’s fact. There is no need to make significant cuts in Social Security or Medicare. The trouble is that hardly anyone admits that accomplishing these goals must include reasonable tax increases to retire the deficit in a reasonable amount of time. Because, and listen closely… Social Security isn’t ballooning the deficit. Medicare doesn’t have to balloon the deficit. Repeat that. Over and over. The tax cut deal just made cut employees’ Social Security contributions by 2% and those contributions will be made up via the general fund. This is why there’s such an outcry on the right about the deficit (even though they also argue that tax cuts don’t have to be paid for…) and on the left about the danger this poses to Social Security. On this one, the left is correct, but it’s a problem which could be remedied with one small change to existing law. Equalize the taxable wage base. It hasn’t been done for 20 years. The cap is too low. Leave employees’ contributions at 4% and raise the limit to cover the difference. That’s all. In 2010 and 2011, the taxable wage base was $106,800. Any earnings over that level do not count for purposes of Social Security contributions (though they do count toward Medicare contributions). This 2009 report (PDF) tells the tale quite simply. CRS estimated the potential impact of eliminating the taxable wage base on future benefits and taxes. If the base were removed in 2013, CRS estimates that by 2035, 21% of beneficiaries would have paid some additional payroll taxes over the course of their lifetimes. However, the average change in taxes and benefits would be small. Looking only at individuals who would pay any additional taxes over the course of their lifetimes, at the median, total lifetime tax payments would rise by 3% and benefits would increase by 2% relative to current law. In general, those in the highest income groups would have the largest changes in both tax payments and in benefits relative to current law. Raising or eliminating the cap on wages that are subject to taxes could reduce the long-range deficit in the Social Security Trust Funds. For example, if the maximum taxable earnings amount had been raised in 2005 from $90,000 to $150,000—roughly the level needed to cover 90% of all earnings—it would have eliminated roughly 40% of the long-range shortfall in Social Security. If all earnings were subject to the payroll tax, but the base was retained for benefit calculations, the Social Security Trust Funds would remain solvent for the next 75 years. However, having different bases for contributions and benefits would weaken the traditional link between the taxes workers pay into the system and the benefits they receive. This report doesn’t address the possibility of keeping workers’ contributions at 4% AND expanding the wage base, but I’m betting some combination of the two would serve the purpose of maintaining solvency while spreading out the contributions in a way that is more progressive. But no. The Very Important Commentators have other Very Important Thoughts on The Subject. If we don’t [cut boomers' benefits], we will be condemned to some combination of inferior policies. We can raise taxes sharply over the next 15 or 20 years, roughly 50 percent from recent levels, to cover expanding old-age subsidies and existing government programs. Or we can accept permanently huge budget deficits. Again I say, bullsh*t. Medicare is indisputably expensive. How can it not be when it covers everyone insurers wouldn’t touch with a ten-foot pole? Elderly and disabled people are not going to be cheap, and it’s not going to get any cheaper when we’ve got returning disabled veterans needing care from the Veterans’ Administration either. The correct answer for Medicare is one that most progressives have embraced for years: Allow others to buy into it. Here’s the theoretical buy-in plan I always thought would work best. It phases in buy-in opportunities and opens a door for those who cannot afford insurance now and will be eligible for federal subsidies later. First 5 years: Allow buy-in from individuals under 30 and over 50. This brings in two groups: those who have difficulty finding affordable insurance and those who are generally young and healthy. The rate for buy-in should be some reasonable cost on an annual basis calculated per-individual without respect to age or health. Second 5 years: Open buy-in to individuals 30-40 on same rate basis. Third 5 years: Open to all individuals at a flat rate per year. This plan would assume that people who are employed and covered under a group insurance plan would not be eligible for a Medicare buy-in, but could opt for it instead of COBRA continuation instead (although COBRA will soon become obsolete under the Affordable Care Act). This plan would make the individual mandate more palatable, provide a baseline for everyone to have access to health care, and it would also give insurance companies apoplexy. The latter is their problem. It’s only one idea for how to do things, but it can be done. This nonsense about how it is Absolutely Necessary that Boomers take the hit for the good of all is just that. Nonsense. And to prove it, here’s Samuelson’s conclusion: But not making cuts would also be unfair to younger generations and the nation’s future. We have a fairness dilemma: Having avoided these problems for decades, we must now be unfair to someone. To admit this is to demolish the moral case for leaving baby boomers alone. Baby boomers – I’m on the leading edge – and their promised benefits are the problem. If they’re off-limits, the problem is being evaded. Together, Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid represent two-fifths of federal spending, double defense’s share. To which I add this incantation for the third time: bullsh*t. We don’t need to be unfair to anyone. We need to be creative. We need to quit lying about how desperate the situation is. We need to admit that conservatives loathe New Deal policies and programs like Social Security and desperately want to kill it. They’ve got the mainstream media, Fox News, and the Tea Party on their side. What they don’t have is truth. Update : Yet another Washington Post opinionator — Michael Gerson — weighs in for cuts to Social Security, and worse, suggests that investments in US Treasury Bonds are somehow bad. Hint for Gerson: Those T-Bonds finance the wars he loves so much. I’m guessing the editorial board at the Washington Post is somehow vested in screwing boomers.

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‘The Collective’: Randian Worship Gone Wild

Click here to view this media Greenspan makes an admission of sorts: Waxman: Then where do you think you made a mistake? Greenspan: I made a mistake in the presuming that the self-interest of organizations, specifically banks and others, was such that they were best capable of protecting their own shareholders… Waxman? Do you have any financial responsibility for the financial crisis? (On his ideology) Greenspan: …to exist you need an ideology. The question is whether it is accurate or not, and what I’m saying to you is, yes, I found a flaw… He found a flaw? What an asshole. Nothing in all of Conservative/Bircherland is as creepy as some of the unmitigated horsecrap that has been recycled from Ayn Rand. It’s the embodiment of a bloated narcissistic belief that you all suck except for us elitist few. Here’s an excerpt from Matt Taibbi’s new book called ‘Griftopia” Greenspan met Rand in the early fifties after leaving Columbia, attending meetings at Rand’s apartment with a circle of like-minded jerkoffs who called themselves by the ridiculous name of the Collective and who provided Greenspan the desired forum for social ascent. These meetings of The Collective would have an enormous impact on American culture by birthing a crackpot anti-theology dedicated to legitimizing self interest — a grotesquerie called Objectivism that hit the Upper East Side cocktail party circuit hard in the fifties and sixties. It is important to to spend some time of the seriously demented history of Objectivism, because this lunatic religion that should have choked to death in its sleep decades ago would go on, thanks in large part to Greenspan to provide the entire intellectual context for the financial disasters of of the early twenty first century. enlarge Fox News and their stable of lying liars have been hoisting this bulls–t religion on its legion of followers every da y while they helped build the Tea Party movement almost singlehandedly to undermine any type of progress we could have made, while the working people of this nation suffer from their economic policies. Digby links to a Steve Benen post about the hypocrisy of Republicans on tax cuts and finds this other crap spewed by Greenspan : Alan Greenspan, the most influential and powerful central banker of the last half century wrote this , as a young man: ‘Atlas Shrugged’ is a celebration of life and happiness. Justice is unrelenting. Creative individuals and undeviating purpose and rationality achieve joy and fulfillment. Parasites who persistently avoid either purpose or reason perish as they should.” In other words, anyone on unemployment is a lazy bastard and should be left to perish while the Millionaire Club should feast off of their Bush tax cuts. As you know, Greenspan was at the helm like an anti-Captain Kirk during much of the destruction of the world’s financial systems during his reign in politics. Ben Stein is one of the Capos of these freaks at Fox, where he is housed. DWT has a list of Republican douchebag quotes about the parasite class, including one of Stein’s patented quotes about the unemployed. “The people who have been laid off and cannot find work are generally people with poor work habits and poor personalities. I say ‘generally’ because there are exceptions. But in general as I survey the ranks of those who are unemployed, I see people who have overbearing and unpleasant personalities and/or do not know how to do a days work.” 2011 is going to be a difficult year because the John Galt worshipers will be running the House. It all ties in with Libertarian and Bircher belief systems that say the free markets are our lord and masters. Digby explains it thus: Woe be to all those ordinary Joes and Janes who are just working at jobs and raising families and trying to find some happiness in their short time on earth without feeling they need to be conquerors. Among many of the political and business elite in America they are no longer considered neighbors or even customers. They are parasites. In other words, the American Dream is nothing more than a system designed to drain all the “purpose and reason” from the legitimate owners of the world. Taxing the hell out of them will teach them a necessary moral lesson.

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GOP’s Plan for the Economy: Force States into Bankruptcy and Default on Union Contracts and Pensions

Click here to view this media Sam Seder filling in for Keith Olbermann on Countdown talked to former C&L contributor, FDL’s Dave Dayden about his recent article at the News Desk — In Unfolding War on Public Employees, State Lawmakers and Media Likely to Do the Work Themselves : There’s no question that Republicans have introduced a bill which would require more transparency on state public pensions, and that they hope this would provide a road map in the states for where they can cut budgets; namely, on the backs of public employees. That doesn’t mean it will happen in exactly that way, however. And the idea that the next Congress will overhaul the 30s-era law allowing states to go bankrupt seems fanciful to me. But I don’t think states or municipalities need much help from the federal government in their desire to rewrite public employee union contracts. There has been a concerted effort for years to demonize and delegitimize public employee unions, from both Republican pols and the media in general . This has left a distorted impression about greedy union contracts and well-paid government functionaries. So the new class of Republican governors would certainly want to capitalize on that by pleasing the public, who now favor things like wage freezes (which Obama just instituted at the federal level) and furloughs and bigger pension contributions, punishing those workers. And they are animated by a general hatred of unions, which have maintained their strength in the public sector while fading away in the private sector. Alongside that, there are legitimate budget problems in the states. The National Conference of State Legislatures estimates a $118 billion dollar shortfall in state and municipal budgets in 2011. And there are certainly some states and municipalities with currently unfunded pension liabilities . While federal aid could offset some of that, there’s no chance it will happen – expect the House to pass, early next year, a resolution basically forbidding “bailouts” of the states. At that point, state governments will either have to cut spending or raise taxes to balance their budgets, which almost all of them are constitutionally required to do. With public employees – or rather, cops, firefighters, nurses, teachers, the people who prepare your state tax refund, the people who get you your driver’s license, the people who get the roads and bridges fixed and basically secure your safe passage through the commons – seen in a negative light, they will in many states be lined up for cuts. There’s much more there so go read the rest. Republicans continue to prove that they’re willing to finish wrecking our economy for political gain and to get their dream fulfilled of busting every union we’ve got left in this country in the process.

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