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Republicans Push National Race to the Bottom

enlarge Credit: New York Times Just days after his sneering “so be it” at the prospect of massive job losses which could result from GOP budget policies, House Speaker John Boehner declared public employees have a “machine gun” pointed “at the heads of local officials.” That makes Boehner just the latest Republican leader respond to a $175 billion shortfall in state budgets that could trigger up to 900,000 layoffs by calling for an end to collective bargain rights for government workers they slander as “overpaid”, “freeloaders” and a “new privileged class in America.” But in their all-out war to crush union – and Democratic – power, Republicans are pushing the states into a headlong race to the bottom. Because as the numbers show, incomes, working conditions and educational performance are worst where union protections are weakest and Republicans poll best. To make their case during the current stand-off in Madison, conservatives have taken aim at Wisconsin’s teachers . Unfortunately for their GOP echo chamber, the right-wing blogosphere made the mistake of complaining that Wisconsin received millions of dollars in federal education aid when solidly Republican red states get much, much more . Then, the would-be Republican union busters are whining that Badger state students can’t read . As it turns out, Wisconsin students outperform their counterparts in those reddest of states where collective bargaining rights are few – or non-existent. Sadly for the right-wing commentariat, the data show that Wisconsin schoolchildren out-read the kids in states where Republicans do best and where the federal government most heavily subsidizes the local education systems. Even more telling, those know-nothing red states also happen to be public workers have the fewest collective bargaining rights . As the New York Times detailed just days ago, state workers without a college degree generally make more than their private sector counterparts ($34,000 versus $32,000, or a 6.3% gap), while college graduates make much less (a -19.9% gap). But in the reddest of states (see map at top), public employees experience a pay deficit regardless of education level . If that geography looks familiar, it should. It not only looks like recent American electoral maps, but the atlas of union-busting as well. Within the borders of the so-called “Right to Work” states (which prohibit workers from being required to join a trade union as a condition of employment), private sector and public sector employees alike find unfriendly faces in power: Just how unfriendly was documented five years ago by the Political Economy Research Institute at the University of Massachusetts. The report, titled ” Decent Work in America: The State-by State Work Environment Index 2005 “, offers an assessment of the best work environments in the United States. The top five states were Delaware, New Hampshire, Minnesota, Vermont and Iowa, the bottom five were South Carolina, Utah, Arkansas Texas and Louisiana. (For the full data tables, analysis and methodology, see the report’s technical background paper .) As a rule of thumb, if your state voted for John McCain in 2008, workers there don’t have it very good. All of the top 5 states voted for Barack for President; all 10 bottom dwellers are residents of George W. Bush’s Red America. The Work Environment Index (WEI) rates the quality of Americans’ working lives by a weighting of three factors: job opportunities, job quality, and job fairness. Job Opportunities includes the statewide unemployment rates, the duration of unemployment, and the percentage of “involuntary” part-timers. Job Quality refers to average wages (importantly, adjusted for the cost of living) and the proportion of workers receiving health and pension benefits. Job Fairness measures each state’s percentage of low-wage workers (an indicator of income inequality), pay differential between men and women, minimum wage levels, collective bargaining rules and importantly, whether it is a “right to work” state. There are no surprises among the worst performing states in the Work Environment Index. Virtually all below the Mason-Dixon Line, the WEI laggards feature dismal pay and an outwardly hostile environment towards union organizing, workers’ rights and collective bargaining. Red America is the home of the Right-to-Work (RTW) states. A leader in the Right-to-Work movement, Bush’s home state of Texas was ranked 50th, with the percentage of workers with health and pension benefits running a full 10% below the top WEI performers. Since the WEI was published in 2005, the data on living standards in union-bashing Republican strongholds hasn’t gotten any prettier. The Census Bureau’s 2011 Statistical Abstract (which is based on 2008 data), shows per capita income and median household income is worst where GOP’s laissez-faire crowd finds its strongest support. And if poverty is at its highest, as Speaker Boehner might say, then so be it. Now, it is true that the cost of living in the right-to-work states is generally lower. And as Politifact explained, in recent years incomes in RTW states have performed better than in free-bargaining states. (Sadly, average household income began declining in the U.S. even before the onset of the Bush recession; an AFL-CIO analysis showed that between 2000 and 2009, median income dropped 3% in TRY states compared to 5% elsewhere.) But as Russell Kashian of the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater explained, given the small and declining unionized workforce in the United States: Any right-to-work effect on income growth likely is diminishing, he said. Employers seeking low wages are more likely to go overseas, rather than choosing a right-to-work state over a free-bargaining state in the U.S. As for right-to-work poster child Texas , the Lone Star State economic miracle never happened. As Paul Krugman explained, over the past decade, the unemployment rate in Texas (where less than 20% of public workers are covered by union contracts) has been little different from New York (where the figure is 75%). Rick Perry nevertheless finds himself with a $25 billion budget hole. As for Texas’ rapid population growth, “its liberal land-use and zoning policies have kept housing cheap.” Meanwhile, his health care system ranks 46th nationwide and dead last for the percentage of residents with insurance. Still, Republicans seek to level the economic playing field by lowering the floor for everyone. Americans wondering what will happen in Wisconsin if Governor Scott Walker succeeds should look not to high-performing states like Connecticut, Massachusetts and New Hampshire, but, say, Alabama. There, workers have no collective bargaining rights in the public or private sector. Dismal, under-funded schools are bankrolled with federal dollars from blue-state taxpayers. And low-incomes and high-poverty are the rule, not the exception. And still, as the New York Times detailed, the small town of Prichard stopped paying its retirees’ pensions. As Jonathan Cohn summed up the Republican race to the bottom: “But ask yourself the same question you should have been asking then: To what extent is the problem that the retirement benefits for unionized public sector workers have become too generous? And to what extent is the problem that retirement benefits for everybody else have become too stingy? I would suggest it’s more the latter than the former.” Republicans have seen the future, and it’s in Alabama. And if jobs, health care coverage and retirement benefits have to be slashed to get there, well, so be it. (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)

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Wisconsin Senator Glenn Grothman: We Can No Longer Have These ‘Slobs’ in Capitol Building

Click here to view this media Wisconsin state Senator Glenn Grothman apparently doesn’t think much of the protesters spending the night in the capitol building and used the excuse that they’re just a bunch of “slobs” trashing the building as the reason why Governor Scott Walker decided to lock them out. Apparently this is something he’s been throwing out there a lot lately as this blog which is devoted to tracking him has taken note of — What did Glenn Grothman get wrong this week? . I guess after this greeting he got from the protesters today while trying to enter the capitol building that they were locked out of, he’s even less happy with those “slobs”. I refuse to link to him, but this video is posted at The Gateway Pundit’s site, or as Media Matters calls him, the Dumbest Man on the Internet , under the breathless headline Breaking: Wisconsin GOP Senator Glenn Grothman Mobbed at Wisconsin Capitol . I guess if by “mobbed” you mean followed and having a bunch of people yell “Shame!” at you and then after being talked to by one of the Democratic congressmen and some others, people leaving with chants of “Peaceful protests!”. Tensions are running high right now in Wisconsin, but I didn’t see anyone looking like they were going to threaten the Senator. I’m sure he doesn’t like being followed or yelled at by a large group of people and I’m quite sure that’s an extremely intimidating situation for anyone to find themselves in. That said, it doesn’t look like anyone was out to do any physical harm to him either. When you’re out to destroy people’s livelihoods and they’re upset with your for it, sometimes democracy is messy and you’re going to end up with pissed off people yelling at you. It’s funny how the right seemed to love this stuff when it was bused in teabaggers screaming at Democratic members of Congress during the health care debate, one of them apparently armed that wingnut and now sadly CNN contributor Dana Loesch defended here , or when there were gun nuts showing up outside an Obama rally in Phoenix with assault rifles , but when one of their own elected officials who catered to them has a group of actual grass roots protesters yelling at him, he’s being “mobbed” by some dangerous crowd of “union thugs.” Quite the double standard out of these so-called “lovers of democracy” I’d say. Guns and threats of shooting someone and lots of yelling by our side sponsored by the Koch brothers, that’s just freedom of speech. For union members who aren’t packing heat but just making a lot of noise, not so much. Transcript below the fold. GROTHMAN: Well, we’re trying to keep some people out of the building because right now the building is becoming a pig sty. People are staying overnight, the building smells. We used to have nice little groups of fourth grade children walking through the building. There was something called the Senate Scholar programs that would track us around. All of that is being shut down by a bunch of slobs taking up the building. We can no longer continue to have all of these slobs in the building. O’DONNELL: Well Senator some of these slobs in the building are elementary school students who may be learning something more interesting or valuable or real about government that’s going on there, don’t you think? GROTHMAN: No. It would be embarrassing to me to take my child to that building today. O’DONNELL: Cory Mason, you get the last word with us. MASON: I’ve had my kids here the last couple weeks. I am proud to see them witness this great moment in democracy. And these slobs that you’re referring to are police officers and nurses and firefighters and people who care for the state. GROTHMAN: No they’re not. MASON: And you ought to be ashamed of yourself. Yes they are! Come in and look. Come on in and talk to them. GROTHMAN: I do talk to them all the time. The people who are inside the building are college students who are having a fun party. That’s largely who’s in the building overnight. And if you get up early Cory and talk to who’s in the building at 7am, you will find it is largely college students and hangers-on having a party in the state capitol. O’DONNELL: Senator Grothman, before we go I just want to get one clarification from you about the crowds. Are you saying that all of the protesters there are slobs? GROTHMAN: No of course not. But the people who are staying overnight are largely making a mess of our capitol and that’s what we were addressing. Why are we keeping people out of the building? Because we do not want to have so many people there overnight defacing our beautiful capitol. MASON: Nobody’s defacing anything. They’re participating in a democracy. O’DONNELL: But you would agree with Cory Mason that many of the protesters are in fact police officers, firefighters, other state workers, who you would never call slobs. GROTHMAN: A very small percentage. I think if you would interview all the people who are creating a ruckus the vast majority who are here today are not police officers or nurses. They are either college T.A.’s, college students or hangers-on or unemployed people who are just looking for somewhere to hang out.

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Today's Supreme Court ruling in Snyder v. Phelps is proving to be yet another occasion for the media to falsely describe the homosexuality-fixated Westboro Baptist Church as a “fundamentalist” congregation. The Associated Press , MSNBC and NPR.org have been among the news outlets using that tag for the Topeka, Kansas, organization that protests funerals of soliders, celebrating their deaths by claiming God killed them because he hates “fags.” But the AP's own style manual strongly cautions against the use of the term “fundamentalist,” noting that the term “fundamentalist has to a large extent taken on pejorative connotations except when applied to groups that stress strict, literal interpretations of Scripture and separation from other Christians.” “In general,” the AP manual adds, “do not use [the term] fundamentalist unless a group applies the word to itself.” At time of publication, Westboro's website was unavailable, but a cached version of its FAQ page on Google yielded no description of WBC as “fundamentalist.” Here's how the church describes itself: The Westboro Baptist Church (WBC) of Topeka, Kansas, is an Old School (or, Primitive) Baptist Church. We adhere to the teachings of the Bible, preach against all form of sin (e.g., fornication, adultery [including divorce and remarriage], sodomy), and insist that the sovereignty of God and the doctrines of grace be taught and expounded publicly to all men. These doctrines of grace were well summed up by John Calvin in his 5 points of Calvinism: Total Depravity, Unconditional Election, Limited Atonement, Irresistible Grace, and Perseverance of the Saints. Although these doctrines are almost universally hated today, they were once loved and believed. Even though the Arminian lies that “God loves everyone” and “Jesus died for everyone” are being taught from nearly every pulpit in this generation, this hasn't always been the case. If you are in a church that supposedly believes the Bible, and you are hearing these lies, then your church doesn't teach what the Bible teaches. If you care about your never-dying soul, you will carefully read every word of this web site, along with the entire Bible. Of course, there are plenty of Christian churches that do favor “strict, literal interpretations of Scripture” that denounce Westboro Baptist, such as the Primitive Baptists, who insist they have nothing in common with WBC. From PrimitiveBaptist.info (emphasis mine): PB-Online and the Primitive Baptist Church do not recognize the ministry of “pastor” Fred Phelps, nor do we have fellowship with the Westboro Baptist Church of Topeka, Kansas, which styles itself as an Old School (or Primitive) Baptist Church. We find the actions of these people to be deplorable and against the very Scriptures they claim to believe. Let it be firmly noted that the Primitive Baptists do not and will not endorse, condone or support the base actions of this group.

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Howard Stern

Charlie Sheen 20/20 Interview [VIDEO] Girl Eats Dog Food for Nitro’s Law: Day 22, Howard Stern Show and the Mentally Challenged Charlie Sheen 2020 Interview [VIDEO] AUDIO: Charlie Sheen Tells Howard Stern About Life With 'The … http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid16157557001/bctid808062078001 The Charlie Sheen saga continued on The Howard Stern Show Tuesday, as the 45-year-old actor chat with the King Of All Media about his raging feud with Two And A … Charlie Sheen to Howard Stern : “I Think Jon Cryer's Behind Me 100 … As Charlie Sheen continues to make his media rounds, he faced his toughest interview yet today, talking with domineering disk jockey Howard Stern on his Sirius 201103100. The Best Charlie Sheen Quotes from Howard Stern Interview The Best Charlie Sheen Quotes from Howard Stern Interview. Charlie Sheen Meltdown continues on Piers Morgan, Howard Stern . Rocket fuel, tiger blood, gnarly. The Daily Show – Howard Stern | Blackinews Watch episode with Blackinews: The Daily Show – Howard Stern online. The Daily Show 2011.02.28 Howard Stern HDTV XviD-FQM | Release BB The Daily Show 2011.02.28 Howard Stern HDTV XviD-FQM. EddieSpence1 says: TV Junkie: TV News Round-Up & Tonight's Must-Watch Plan: The Rundown: Howard Stern 's appearance on last night's … http://bit.ly/ga87hO

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Pizzeria Owner Dumped Mice On Rivals

Pizzeria owner dumped mice on rivals , cops say « New Media Blog Pizzeria owner dumped mice on rivals , cops say. CBS News & Associated Press, by Staff Posted By: Photoonist- Tue, 01 Mar 2011 20:18:59 GMT Upper Darby, Pa. ‘ A pizzeria owner with mice problems he blamed on competitors tried to sabotage … LaidiElle says: Crazy! RT @wltx : PA pizza store owner dumps mice on rival shops to scare away business http://bit.ly/eLIk7O

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MSNBC’s Matthews, O’Donnell, Schultz and Uygur Cherry-pick Huckabee to Make Him a Birther

Four of MSNBC's extended prime time hosts on Tuesday cherry-picked something Mike Huckabee said on Steve Malzberg's radio show in order to depict the possible Republican presidential candidate as a birther. Before getting to their highly unprofessional snippets, implications, and conclusions, here's what the former Arkansas governor actually said Monday (videos follow with transcripts and commentary): STEVE MALZBERG, HOST: I mean, don’t you see black liberation theology as a, as something that, that was fair to bring up as McCain did not, and if you were to run against Barack Obama, would you consider Rev. Wright and all those years in the church as fair game or not? MIKE HUCKABEE, FORMER ARKANSAS GOVERNOR: I would spend more time asking Barack Obama whether he believed in black liberation theology rather than Rev. Wright did. I really want to know, does he believe that salvation is individual or is it corporate and grouped. I’m very frankly delighted that we saw an African-American elected to the presidency. I just wish it had not been someone that was so leftist that he just, world views are just completely opposite of that of any American president. I take great issue with virtually every position Barack Obama takes as a president. In my book, I mean there not, there’s some sharp elbows thrown, but not at him, but at his positions, because I think his actions as president are hurting this country, and hurting our future. I have no hesitancy in taking him on for his domestic policy, his economic policy, his policy toward national security or our role as Americans. One of the comments I make, Steve, in the book that I think sums up my view of his foreign policy is that Teddy Roosevelt said, “Speak softly and carry a big stick.” His is, “Make apologies and throw away the stick.” And it’s hurting this country, and he said that we shouldn’t have any country fear us. I take great exception. I think we ought to have a military that everybody in this world is scared to death of. MALZBERG: So you would be different than McCain in many ways. You would confront him, especially now since you have four years of policy to scrutinize, correct? HUCKABEE: Absolutely. MALZBERG: Alright, one more for you. HUCKABEE: I think that’s the key is to go, go head to head and show the clarity of differences between the two. MALZBERG: One more for you, well, two more, the second one will be short. Don't you think it's fair also to ask him – I know your stance on this – “How come we don't have a health record, we don't have a college record, we don't have a birth cer – why Mr. Obama did you spend millions of dollars in courts all over this country to defend against having to present a birth certificate.” It's one thing to say, I've — you've seen it, goodbye. But why go to court and send lawyers to defend against having to show it? Don't you think we deserve to know more about this man? HUCKABEE: I would love to know more. What I know is troubling enough. And one thing that I do know is his having grown up in Kenya, his view of the Brits, for example, very different than the average American. When he gave the bust back to the Brits — MALZBERG: Of Winston Churchill. HUCKABEE: The bust of Winston Churchill, a great insult to the British. But then if you think about it, his perspective as growing up in Kenya with a Kenyan father and grandfather, their view of the Mau Mau Revolution in Kenya is very different than ours because he probably grew up hearing that the British were a bunch of imperialists who persecuted his grandfather. MALZBERG: Oh, he despised the West, he despises the Brits, and I think he could take it all out on Israel, and that’s why he despises Israel. He’s not too thrilled with our history either. But let me just try to get an answer from you. Would you say to him or at least ask him in a debate, “Why did you go to court and spend millions of dollars on lawyers to prevent from having to show your birth certificate? If you have one and it’s there, why not show it?” HUCKABEE: The only reason I'm not as confident that there's something about the birth certificate, Steve, is because I know the Clintons well, and believe me, they have lots of investigators out on him, and I'm convinced if there was anything that they could have found on that, they would have found it, and I promise they would have used it. To be sure, Huckabee was 100 percent wrong about Obama having lived in Kenya. A spokesman Tuesday said the former governor misspoke. However, that didn't prevent the resulting firestorm. At 1:26 PM, the shills at Media Matters posted a video and transcript of much of Huckabee's relevant comments to Malzberg under the headline ” Huckabee: Obama Grew Up 'In Kenya .'” Not at all surprising, the George Soros-funded, far-left organization concluded from Huckabee's comments that he was claiming Obama wasn't born in Hawaii although he never said that: PolitiFact has noted that there “is not one shred of evidence to disprove PolitiFact's conclusion that the candidate's name is Barack Hussein Obama, or to support allegations that the birth certificate he released isn't authentic.” As this disgraceful organization's next step is typically to do an e-mail blast of their baseless conclusions, it was not at all surprising that by 3:13 PM, the New York Times Caucus Blog had bitten and bitten hard with a piece entitled ” Huckabee Questions Obama's Birth Certificate “: Mike Huckabee, the former governor of Arkansas and a possible Republican presidential candidate in 2012, said on Monday that he would “love to know more” about where President Obama was born and claimed — falsely — that Mr. Obama was raised in Kenya. Actually, that's not at all what Huckabee said. In response to a lengthy question from Malzberg in the middle of a lengthy discussion about Obama, when asked, “Don't you think we deserve to know more about this man,” the former governor said, “I would love to know more.” But the genie was now fully out of the bottle, and left-wing websites were running with this ball like a wide receiver in the open field seeing nothing but the end zone in front of him. Consider that at press time, a Google search of “Huckabee, Obama, Kenya” produced 206,000 results. Dutifully looking to take down any potential presidential threat to the object of their affection in the upcoming elections, the shills at MSNBC were quite willing to similarly cherry-pick Huckabee's comments in order to depict him as a birther: CHRIS MATTHEWS, HOST: Back to HARDBALL. Time for the “Sideshow.” First up: We know a lot of Republicans wrongly believe that President Obama was born and raised in Kenya, over in Africa. Guess who recently joined the birther chorus? Mike Huckabee. Here’s Huck on radio yesterday talking about the president. (BEGIN AUDIO CLIP) MALZBERG: Don’t you think we deserve to know more about this man? HUCKABEE: I would love to know more. But what I know is troubling enough. And one thing that I do know is his having grown up in Kenya, his view of the Brits, for example, very different than the average American. (END AUDIO CLIP) MATTHEWS: Well, the reality, of course, is President Obama grew up in Hawaii, one of the states of the union, and Indonesia, when he had a stepfather there. In fact, he didn’t even visit Kenya in his entire youth ever. Huckabee’s spokesperson, by the way, finally backpedaled late today, saying his boss simply misspoke. Yes, he was pandering to that radio guy. Next up was the totally hapless and unwatchable Cenk Uygur: CENK UYGUR, HOST: Alright, is Mike Huckabee a birther? During an appearance on the Steve Malzberg radio show, the host was trying to keep the ridiculous conservative theory alive. He wanted to know why President Obama spent millions in court defending against having to present a birth certificate and all that same nonsense. Now here's a response. (BEGIN AUDIO CLIP) MALZBERG: Don't you think we deserve to know more about this man? HUCKABEE: I would love to know more. What I know is troubling enough. And one thing that I do know is his having grown up in Kenya, his view of the Brits, for example, very different than the average American. When he gave the bust back to the Brits — MALZBERG: Of Winston Churchill. HUCKABEE: The bust of Winston Churchill, a great insult to the British. But then if you think about it, his perspective as growing up in Kenya with a Kenyan father and grandfather, their view of the Mau Mau Revolution in Kenya is very different than ours because he probably grew up hearing that the British were a bunch of imperialists who persecuted his grandfather. (END AUDIO CLIP) UYGUR: Now there he said that Obama grew up in Kenya not once but twice. In reality of course President Obama was born in Hawaii and was raised in Hawaii. He did go to Indonesia for some years. Oh my God, wait until they get a load of that. And by the way, just in case you’re keeping track, the number of years that President Obama lived in Kenya would be zero. A spokesman for Huckabee commented today saying, “It was nothing more than a misstatement. Of course, we meant that he grew up in Uganda.” Okay, he didn't say that last part, but you know they were thinking it. At 7PM was a replay of “Hardball” followed by “The Last Word”: LAWRENCE O’DONNELL, HOST: Time for tonight's Rewrite. If you think of Mike Huckabee as a genial, guitar playing, singing former governor of Arkansas who meets the basic integrity standards typical of former governors of Arkansas, you will be shocked, absolutely shocked by what he said yesterday. (BEGIN AUDIO CLIP) MALZBERG: Why Mr. Obama did you spend millions of dollars in courts all over this country to defend against having to present a birth certificate. It's one thing to say, I've — you've seen it, goodbye. But why go to court and send lawyers to defend against having to show it? Don't you think we deserve to know more about this man? HUCKABEE: I would love to know more. What I know is troubling enough. And one thing that I do know is his having grown up in Kenya, his view of the Brits, for example, very different than the average American. (END AUDIO CLIP) O’DONNELL: Well, maybe it would be if he grew up in Kenya, but Barack Obama did not grow up in Kenya! (BEGIN AUDIO CLIP) HUCKABEE: His perspective as growing up in Kenya with a Kenyan father and grandfather. (END AUDIO CLIP) O’DONNELL: No, no, no, no, no. He did not grow up in Kenya. Yes, he did have a Kenyan father and grandfather, but he did not grow up there. This is what we know. This is what is beyond dispute. Barack Obama was born in Hawaii. He lived in the United States until he was six. His mother moved to Indonesia, Indonesia, where Barack Obama went to school from ages six to ten. At age ten, he moved back to Hawaii where he lived until he went off to college in California, not Kenya, California. Huckabee refers to Obama growing up in Kenya as, quote, “The one thing I do know.” If that is the one thing that Mike Huckabee knows, then Huckabee knows less than nothing. That would presumably hold for governance. What does that mean Huckabee knows about Social Security? What does Huckabee know about Medicare? What does Huckabee know about the defense budget? What does Huckabee know about what we should do next in Libya? What does Huckabee know about anything other than how to lose weight? As the pressure mounted today on Huckabee for lying about where the President grew up, Huckabee’s handlers issued the lamest possible press release in reaction to getting caught in an outright lie. It was, quote, “Gov. Huckabee simply misspoke.” Huckabee wants to leave it at that because he knows this particular brand of misspeaking is very, very useful for inspiring support of the 51 percent, 51 percent of national Republican primary voters who believe that Barack Obama is not a citizen of the United States. Mike Huckabee desperately wants every one of their votes if he's going to run for president next year. In his ugly pursuit of those votes he has now fallen below the already low standard for integrity that we have come to expect from former governors of Arkansas. That last sentence of course was a slam on Bill Clinton, which is interesting considering the man setting the “low standard for integrity that we have come to expect from former governors of Arkansas” was honored last week by MSNBC in a love letter from Chris Matthews called “President of the World.” More importantly, all three of these MSNBC hosts up to this point dishonestly omitted the beginning of Malzberg's relevant question, “Don't you think it's fair also to ask him – I know your stance on this – 'How come we don't have a health record, we don't have a college record?'” Malzberg wasn't just talking to Huckabee about the birther issue, but also other questions media members largely ignored during the 2008 campaign. As such, when he asked, “Don't you think we deserve to know more about this man,” it wasn't just about where he was born. Furthermore, not one of the three hosts played the part of the Malzberg interview when Huckabee disavowed birthers altogether: HUCKABEE: The only reason I'm not as confident that there's something about the birth certificate, Steve, is because I know the Clintons well, and believe me, they have lots of investigators out on him, and I'm convinced if there was anything that they could have found on that, they would have found it, and I promise they would have used it. Indeed. Yet Matthews, O'Donnell, and Uygur didn't play this part of Malzberg's interview with Huckabee, and neither did Ed Schultz: ED SCHULTZ, HOST: Republican presidential hopeful Mike Huckabee wants to have his cake and eat it, too, but the only thing is he put his foot in his mouth today. Now Media Matters heard his appearance with conservative radio talk show host on the low-rated Steve Malzberg show. Here’s Huckabee’s response to questions about the President’s citizenship. Notice Schultz is such an idiot that he doesn't know the interview he was playing happened Monday. But I digress: (BEGIN AUDIO CLIP) MALZBERG: Don't you think we deserve to know more about this man? HUCKABEE: I would love to know more. What I know is troubling enough. And one thing that I do know is his having grown up in Kenya, his view of the Brits, for example, very different than the average American. (END AUDIO CLIP) SCHULTZ: So, Mike Huckabee says President Obama grew up in Kenya even though the President’s own biography says he grew up in Hawaii and Indonesia. Maybe Huckabee just misspoke. (BEGIN AUDIO CLIP) HUCKABEE: His perspective as growing up in Kenya with a Kenyan father and grandfather, their view of the Mau Mau Revolution in Kenya is very different than ours because he probably grew up hearing that the British were a bunch of imperialists who persecuted his grandfather. (END AUDIO CLIP) SCHULTZ: Hmmm, hmmm. Interesting. Huckabee tried to clarify these statements on his Huck PAC website saying, “I simply misspoke when I alluded to President Obama growing up in ‘Kenya’ and meant to say Indonesia.” Actually, here was Huckabee's complete statement concerning this matter: On Monday, while on Steve Malzberg's radio show on New York's WOR Radio, I was asked about the President Obama's birth certificate issue. In my answer, I simply misspoke when I alluded to President Obama growing up in 'Kenya' and meant to say Indonesia. As I have stated on page 1 of my new book 'A Simple Government' and in numerous interviews with dozens of reporters – I don't believe there is an issue with Barack Obama's birth certificate. However, I do believe there are serious issues with the President's policies, and I have been openly opposed to the President's world view. I'm not surprised the NY Times chose to sensationalize this story. In fact, the New York Times, the AP, and other news organizations ran with the “sensationalized story” despite being specifically told by Steve Malzberg himself that they were incorrect in their assessment of the sound bite. You just can't help but laugh when my simple slip of the tongue, becomes a huge story – and a certain Presidential candidate claiming to visit all 57 states, gets widely ignored. More on that later, but let's get back to Schultz: SCHULTZ: So he misspoke and meant Indonesia even though he said Kenya twice – you heard it! – and talked about the Mau Mau rebellion against the British in Kenya. But take a look at Huckabee’s past statements about the President of the United States. This is the first sentence of his new book. Quote: “Since Barack Obama was elected, plenty of books have been written criticizing his administration and accusing him of all sorts of things – from being a Marxist to lying about his citizenship to being a Muslim. But if you know me or you’re familiar with my commentaries on TV and radio, you know I don’t like to make politics personal.” Well, he made similar comments about birthers on “Good Morning America” last week. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) HUCKABEE: For Republicans to even be bringing it up, I think it’s a waste of energy and time. Let’s focus on the issues with which we have disagreement not on really the extraneous personal things that are immaterial. (END VIDEO CLIP) SCHULTZ: Now, you may ask, “Why didn’t Huckabee say the same thing to Steve Malzberg on the right-wing radio today?” Well here’s why. A recent poll showed 51 percent of likely Republican primary voters believe President Obama was born in another country. Of those 51 percent, Mike Huckabee is their top choice for president. So, when you ask the non-birthers in the GOP their choice, it is Mitt Romney. Huckabee has to keep the birthers happy. But he can’t win the general election by pandering to them. He hasn’t officially announced his candidacy, but make no mistake about it, Mike Huckabee is already running a couple of campaigns. So, here's Schultz's logic: Huckabee is comfortable publishing a book in which he disavows birthers, has no compunction against disavowing birthers on a broadcast television morning show that is now averaging 4.7 million viewers, but when he goes on what Schultz described as a “low-rated” radio program, he suddenly feels the need to speak differently on this issue. And this man has his own show to espouse such utter nonsense. The reality is that conservatives know Huckabee isn't a birther, so he doesn't have to pretend that he is. As Hot Air's Allahpundit wrote Tuesday: My read on this is the same as Weigel’s , that Huckabee’s not questioning Obama’s citizenship so much as mistakenly making a hash of his biography. He knows that Obama grew up abroad, but somewhere along the line, between Birther chatter about Kenya and Gingrich’s talking points about Obama’s “Kenyan, anti-colonial worldview,” he forgot that it was Indonesia where O was raised. Indeed. But such logic is inconsequential when the goal is to take down all of Obama's potential opponents next year. And this is the kind of unprofessional reporting Americans should expect from MSNBC the next 20 months as these shills do everything within their power to get the object of their affection re-elected. They're going to cherry-pick, convolute, misrepresent, and flat out lie when necessary. The folks at NBC and new owners Comcast must be so proud of the lack of integrity and journalistic malpractice now on display at this so-called news network. Interested readers are advised that Huckabee will be back on Malzberg's show Wednesday to address this issue in greater detail, and can listen to Malzberg's take on the media's pathetic response to the former Arkansas governor's comments at WOR radio's website (relevant section begins at minute 18:40).

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Editors Love Leaks, But Are Furious That Fired Darrell Issa Aide Shared Reporter E-mails

The media's policy on leaks is obviously “Good for me, but not for thee.” It is okay for journalists to score scoops and win Pulitzer Prizes by printing everyone else’s secrets. It's okay for Julian Assange to goad the U.S. “military industrial complex” with WikiLeaks. But leak reporter E-mails, and you have no ethics whatsoever. Politico broke the story that Kurt Bardella, a spokesman for House Government Oversighty Committee chairman Darrell Issa, may have shared reporter E-mails with New York Times reporter Mark Leibovich, who's writing a book on Washington's “culture of self-love.' Issa fired Bardella for upsetting the reporters. The story included high dudgeon from Politico editor-in-chief John F. Harris, in a letter sent to Issa: “The practice of sharing reporter e-mails with another journalist on a clandestine basis would be egregiously unprofessional under any circumstances,” Harris wrote. “As the editor-in-chief of POLITICO, my concern is heightened by information suggesting that POLITICO journalists may have had their reporting compromised by this activity.” Politico editor Jim VandeHei echoed Harris in a video on their website, suggesting it's an “Extraordinary breach of the expectations that reporters have in dealings with a spokesman” and Republicans are “very upset, very nervous” about this “huge breach.” Then, when the Times fired back that Politico had submitted Freedom of Information Act requests for reporter E-mails, Harris shifted his spin. From Billy House at National Journal : In fact, within hours of Bardella’s firing, the Times appeared to fire back on Tuesday night by publishing an item revealing that Ken Vogel, a Politico reporter, had himself in 2009 made a broad Freedom of Information Act request to at least a half-dozen cabinet departments for all government communications with reporters or editors of 16 news organizations. The Times reported that in an interview about Vogel's FOIA request on Tuesday, Politico Editor-in-Chief John Harris said there was a difference between a routine request for correspondence under FOIA and an arrangement in which e-mails were passed on immediately to another reporter…. In a statement on Tuesday, Issa explained “While our review of allegations raised by Politico is not yet complete, it has become clear that the committee’s Deputy Communications Director Kurt Bardella did share reporter e-mail correspondence with New York Times journalist

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Newstalgia Reference Room – Lebanon – 1958 (Middle East Excursions Past)

enlarge U.S. Marines in Beirut, 1958 – sooner or later . . . . Click here to view this media With talk today about creating a”No-Fly Zone” over Libya in response to the continuing crisis over Gadaffi, I keep wondering how wise a move of that sort is. Historically, there has always been some sort of physical involvement with European or American forces in the region whenever a crisis looms. One of the gratifying aspects to the current situations in Tunisia and Egypt is that we purposely kept a hands-off approach to the crisis, allowing that thing called “the right of self-determination” to take hold. And even though our intentions may be pure and humanitarian, we still have a long enough history in the region to remind those on the streets that our efforts in the past have not always been the most pure and forthright. We have often arrived, but with strings attached. Many years ago it was the result of the Cold War that U.S. aid to those regions came flooding in because it was feared the Soviet Union would jump in as well. But now we have the opportunity to do things differently for the first time perhaps ever. Case in point about our past involvements in the Middle East; here is a broadcast from the CBS Radio series Radio Beat which centers around the crisis in 1958 concerning Lebanon. At the center of the controversy was pro-Western Lebanese President Camille Chamoun who, at the time of this broadcast (June 26th, 1958) was trying to maintain an air of normalcy about the growing rebellion in his country. Howard K. Smith (CBS News): “Mister President, some aspects of the conflict are mystifying to the American public, I would like to ask you what exactly was the original cause of the trouble in Lebanon?” President Camille Chamoun (Pres. Of Lebanon): “Well, it is simply the desire of the United Arab Republic to dominate the policy of this country.” Smith: “Well, it is said that the original cause was a decision by you to try to be elected for a second term as President, is there any truth in that? Chamoun: “The election or re-election of the President in any country is simply a domestic affair. It happened in the past, that Lebanon has elected many Presidents, it has re-elected one President, and nothing happened of that kind between government and opposition. The fact that there is an armed rebellion today and that these armed rebellions has been assisted with financial support, military equipment, volunteers and terrorists coming from Egypt and Syria, is the proof that the domestic issue was only a pretext for the United Arab Republic to start this problem with the ultimate aim of dominating the policy of Lebanon.” Less than a week later, Chamoun made an urgent plea to the U.S. for military aid and we sent in the Marines. The rebellion was quashed and Chamoun remained in power for at least another month when it was politely yet firmly suggested by our State Department that Chamoun step down in order that another hand-picked candidate assume the Presidency. Granted, this was right in the middle of the Cold War and it was a popularity contest between Washington and Moscow, but these superpower interventions (no matter which ideological side of the fence) in the domestic affairs of a country are not without their paybacks. And as we’ve seen in the case of Iran, can blow up in our faces. And we react with surprise and dismay when we really have no reason to – we brought it all on ourselves. When we take on the role of World’s Policeman or dabble in Nation Building we set ourselves up to accept the blame for everything that goes wrong with the domestic inner-workings of a nation – the fault and all the blame rests on us because we insisted on buying into it. The current situation that’s brewing in Iraq is a case in point. We’ve been painted over and over in the region of the Middle East because we insist in meddling in affairs that don’t belong to us. And Lebanon in 1958 was certainly no different. Hopefully Libya in 2011 will be. Just sayin’.

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The Villagers Think the Peons Just Need to be ‘Brought Along’ on Social Security ‘Reform’

Click here to view this media As Digby noted, the Villagers think Americans are too dumb to make decisions . I’d say the larger problem is being exposed to too many like these two hacks that Tweety decided were somehow qualified to weigh in on Social Security “reform”. “Reform” of course meaning most of us should work until we drop dead because heaven forbid we can’t ask the rich to pay more in taxes. They’ve got way too many propagandized already into believing they should not expect Social Security to be there for them. Little wonder when this is the garbage that pollutes our airways. As for people not being willing to cut Medicare, perhaps some of these villagers ought to talk to the Republicans and their puppet masters who ran millions of dollars worth of ads in the last election demagogueing the cuts in Medicare in the health care reforms. It’s funny how that’s the one time in history that the Democrats took on one of their base’s favored programs and didn’t get any credit for it. In fact, they got crucified by the hypocritical GOP and nobody in DC said a peep. It’s not that the Village needs to “bring the public along” it’s that the public needs to stop listening to the Villagers altogether. They are a font of misinformation. Oh, and by the way, the deficit commission didn’t issue any recommendations because they couldn’t get a consensus. There’s a reason for that if the oh-so-smug and secure establishment journalists cared to look into it they’d find it’s really not painless for working people after all. Much more there so go read the rest. Transcript below the fold. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) REP. JOHN BOEHNER (R-OH): To not address entitlement programs, as in the case with the budget the president has put forward, would be an economic and moral failure. (END VIDEO CLIP) MATTHEWS: Wow. An economic and moral failure not to go after Social Security and Medicare? Wait until we see what happens when they do go after it. Welcome back to Hardball. While it appears there may be a deal coming to keep the United States government funded for another two weeks and open for business, avoiding a shutdown, the question remains whether Congress or the president will do something to curb the big, growing cost of programs like Social Security and Medicare. Or is it all talk and no action, for the obvious reason? Susan Molinari is a former New York congresswoman. And Jeanne Cummings is assistant manager editor at Politico. Jeanne, just in strict analytical terms, watching these folks, I wonder if anybody who wants to get elected again in Congress is willing to put their hand up and say: “I want to cut the benefits going to people on Social Security. I want to cut the health benefits. You’re not going to get dialysis for more than three months, X-many months. You’re not going to get the artificial limb reworked after seven years. You’re not going to get the following”? When it comes to the realities of cutting these programs, will any politician actually do it? JEANNE CUMMINGS: I don’t think we’re going to see that any time soon, and without a great deal of change here in Washington, Chris, for the reasons that you make clear. It’s politically very, very difficult. You have down in Florida Representative Adam (sic) West, who has actually talked — he’s a Republican, a freshman — and he’s talked more than many of them about some of the changes that would have to come to those programs. And the Democrats are immediately targeting him. And that — those are the very issues they’re using against him. MATTHEWS: Yes. CUMMINGS: So, it’s going to take a sea change. MATTHEWS: All you have to do — Paula Hawkins, remember — I’m sorry. But, remember, Paula Hawkins was a senator from down there, never did anything wrong, except she did what they told her to do. She voted to — she came out in public support of cutting for the COLAs for Social Security and got blown away. Jeremiah Denton. I think it’s the only issue, Susan — you were in the House — that you can be beaten for, just one vote. Vote to cut Social Security, vote to cut Medicare benefits to people, what happens to you? SUSAN MOLINARI (R), FORMER U.S. CONGRESSWOMAN: Well, except nobody’s talking about cutting benefits of the recipients right now. What they’re talking about is changing programs in the future. And I think… (CROSSTALK) MATTHEWS: But, in the end, doesn’t that do the same thing? MOLINARI: I think the Republicans are going to take that chance. Look, John Boehner has just said it. The speaker went out there and said it. Eric Cantor has said it. Paul Ryan has said, when he unveils his budget in a few weeks, there`s going to be entitlement change. Governor Christie has stood up and has staked his claim. Mitch Daniels has. I mean, you’re starting to see — and, look, it’s a different… MATTHEWS: It’s easy for Christie. He’s not doing this. He’s telling them to do it. (CROSSTALK) MOLINARI: It’s a different world now, though. MATTHEWS: OK. (CROSSTALK) MOLINARI: This is a different world. MATTHEWS: OK, Susan Molinari, I respect your judgment. Here’s the latest “USA Today” poll, Gallup poll — 61 percent of Americans oppose cutting Medicare spends — 64 percent oppose cutting Social Security spending. These are two-thirds votes. MOLINARI: I think the American people told the Republicans when they elected in the majority that they wanted this deficit to come under control and that they wanted a little sanity and some validity. MATTHEWS: I agree with all that. MOLINARI: We’re starting to see this with the C.R. We’re starting to see this with what the new Republican budget is going to do. I think you’re going to be surprised by the leadership that the Republican Party is going to show. And I think the American people are going to present them with reelection at the polls for showing that kind of leadership. I think what the last election about — was leadership. MATTHEWS: Every time, Susan — or, Jeanne, every time we poll people — and I did this back in, I think, 1971, working for a senator from Utah. You poll people and you ask them what they would like to see government cut, they say foreign aid and general government expenses. They want to see more money on education. They don’t want any cuts in Social Security or anything like it. If you ask them, do they want to see government waste cut, they don’t want real cuts. For example, I was just out doing something for Alzheimer’s this past week out in Las Vegas, trying to raise awareness for the big group out there that is working on research. Imagine telling people who have an Alzheimer’s victim in their house and they’re a caregiver — oh by the way, we’re cutting spending on research that you’re going to face another 20 or 30 years of Alzheimer’s hell in this country because we can’t solve the problem. Do people really want those kinds of cuts? CUMMINGS: Well, I think in addition to those challenges that you’ve just outlined, there is an additional one for this Congress and the White House if they really want to do anything. And that is that there is a sizable majority in the 60 percents in a recent poll by Kaiser who thinks you can fix Medicare and Social Security by just cutting the other parts of the budget. So, the public, while they may be coming around, they aren’t ready for this debate yet. There’s a lot of education that would have to take place before Washington could move in a serious and fundamental way. What struck me with the deficit commission in December was they made recommendations that would change Social Security, for instance. MATTHEWS: Yes. CUMMINGS: These — the effect of — the effect of those changes wouldn’t take place, wouldn’t affect anybody until 2050, OK? That’s a long time from now. MATTHEWS: I know. CUMMINGS: And, yet, they were criticized roundly on both sides of the aisle. And nobody’s been willing to touch that one. So, until they deal, they bring the public with them, I think this will remain, they’ve got to educate the public. But until they do that, I think it’s going to be a very tough issue. MATTHEWS: So, you’re 26 years old and this will affect you. I’m going the math. It’s 39 years from now. MOLINARI: Twenty-six-year-olds, 52-year-olds don’t rely on Social Security for our benefits. I mean, we’ve all grown up with the reality we don’t think it’s going to be there for them. That is why I think — you know, look, the line is being drawn. The abdication of leadership by President Obama in following in anything that his deficit commission — (CROSSTALK) MATTHEWS: Who on the other side is doing it? MOLINARI: Three week, Paul Ryan, and you just heard John Boehner say they`re going to make some changes in terms of entitlement reforms. When they come forth with their budget when they’re done cleaning — (CROSSTALK) MATTHEWS: Do you think that’s a smart move on their part? MOLINARI: I think it is a smart move for this country. And I think the voters understand it now. I think it is a different time than when Paula Hawkins and others — MATTHEWS: Jeanne, do you think the Republicans are going to be the first ones to move on this? Not the Democrats? CUMMINGS: I will be — I think they are going to do something. They are promised to do it and there will be something in their budget. Whether that is a serious proposal or not, I’m skeptical of. Only because we’ve been in this town for a long time and there are a lot of proposals that are supposedly serious proposals but they really aren’t. So, we’ll see if they will be first out and it will be a serious proposal. MATTHEWS: I will be very impressed — negatively or positively, I’ll be impressed if your party, the Republican Party, actually says, raise the retirement age, reduce the benefit levels, something that a person can see when they watch a program like this and read the paper, they can get it. They are cutting the benefits. MOLINARI: This is the party that’s at least proposed the spending cuts for C.R. that the Democrat Party was suppose to pass last year and moving toward September. So, let’s give them credit for what they’ve done so far. MATTHEWS: You’ve just done that. That’s sufficient. Anyway, thank you, Susan Molinari. It’s great to have you on because you are a good partisan. But I’m waiting for the Republicans or anybody — because I watched this under Reagan. And he was as popular as you could get in this country, and he got burnt on this thing.

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We always knew that Mike Huckabee is prone to occasional lapses in which he reveals his real, deeply ignorant self. But this one takes the cake: MALZBERG: Don’t you think it’s fair also to ask him, I know your stance on this. How come we don’t have a health record, we don’t have a college record, we don’t have a birth cer – why Mr. Obama did you spend millions of dollars in courts all over this country to defend against having to present a birth certificate. It’s one thing to say, I’ve — you’ve seen it, goodbye. But why go to court and send lawyers to defend against having to show it? Don’t you think we deserve to know more about this man? HUCKABEE: I would love to know more. What I know is troubling enough. And one thing that I do know is his having grown up in Kenya, his view of the Brits, for example, very different than the average American. When he gave the bust back to the Brits — MALZBERG: Of Winston Churchill. HUCKABEE: The bust of Winston Churchill, a great insult to the British. But then if you think about it, his perspective as growing up in Kenya with a Kenyan father and grandfather, their view of the Mau Mau Revolution in Kenya is very different than ours because he probably grew up hearing that the British were a bunch of imperialists who persecuted his grandfather. Huckabee, of course, is just repeating his Fox News colleague Stuart Varney’s slimy attack on President Obama of a few weeks ago — a simple and outrageous lie. And yes, Varney was just repeating Glenn Beck. As Eric Hananoki at Media Matters observes: Contrary to Huckabee’s claims, Obama did not grow up in Kenya. Obama spends significant portions of his book Dreams From My Father describing his first visit to Kenya in the late 1980s. On page 304, Obama writes of his arrival at Kenyatta International Airport (emphasis added): Kenyatta International Airport was almost empty. Officials sipped at their morning tea as they checked over passports; in the baggage area, a creaky conveyor belt slowly disgorged luggage. Auma was nowhere in sight, so I took a seat on my carry-on bag and lit a cigarette. After a few minutes, a security guard with a wooden club started to walk toward me. I looked around for an ashtray, thinking I must be in a no-smoking area, but instead of scolding me, the guard smiled and asked if I had another cigarette to spare. “This is your first trip to Kenya, yes?” he asked as I gave him a light. “That’s right.” “I see.” He squatted down beside me. “You are from America. You know my brother’s son, perhaps. Samson Otieno. He is studying engineering in Texas.” I told him that I’d never been to Texas and so hadn’t had the opportunity to meet his nephew. This seemed to disappoint him, and he took several puffs from his cigarette in quick succession. The BBC noted in a 2008 article that “Barack Obama has never lived in Kenya and he has visited the country just three times.” Additionally, Obama did not grow up “with a Kenyan father and grandfather.” Indeed, Dreams From My Father is largely about Obama’s struggles with the absence of his father. The AP noted in 2006 that Obama “was mostly raised in Hawaii and did not know his Kenyan father well.” Maybe Huckabee is thinking of Indonesia, where in fact Obama lived between the ages of 6 and 10. I think the Dutch were bigger subject there than the British, though. And it’s a looooooooong way from Kenya. Either Huckabee is a secret Birther, or he’s as ignorant of his geography as the Shrilla From Wasilla.

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