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David Cay Johnston Asks President Obama to Call the Republicans Bluff on Bush Tax Cuts

Click here to view this media Keith Olbermann talked to journalist David Cay Johnston about how President Obama should handle the Republicans and their demand that those Bush tax cuts for the rich remain in place: call their bluff. Call Their Bluff, Mr. President : Will President Obama cave on yet another of his campaign promises, this time by giving in to Republican demands to extend all of the temporary Bush tax cuts? The president signaled this on his Asia trip when he said his principal concern was retaining the middle-income tax rates. Republican congressional leaders have said they will let all of the Bush tax cuts expire unless the president bows to their demand that the top 3 percent of Americans be included in any tax cut extension. Obama should call their bluff. I don’t think the Republicans are so stupid that they would let all the Bush tax cuts expire if they cannot continue tax cuts for billionaires and the affluent on all of their income. But let’s assume that the Republican leaders on Capitol Hill are that dumb, or so beholden to the antitax billionaires funding their campaigns, that they would force universal tax increases. This is a fight that Obama can win, and win handily, if he has the backbone to stand up for the vast majority and sound tax policies, and to take on the antitax billionaires who are piling up huge gains while unemployment, debt, and fear stalk our land. A sudden reduction in take-home pay in January would seriously damage our fragile economy, not to mention provoke widespread anger and fear. The economic news would be so awful that a president half as eloquent as Obama could easily focus attention on the Republican all-or-nothing tax policies as the cause of this universal pain. And like an extra cherry atop a sundae, the Republicans gave Obama a gift when they said they have no interest in renewing his $400 Making Work Pay tax credit. That statement alone lets the president paint Republicans as tax hikers who want to hit people who work, while shielding billionaires. Moreover, since polls show that hardly anyone knows about this Obama tax cut, which the administration calls the largest middle-class tax cut in history, promoting it would be like getting a second free cherry from the GOP. Read on… Olbermann also did a great job of laying waste to the talking point that taxing the rich is going to harm the “job creators”. The one thing he left out is that those tax cuts are creating jobs alright, just not in America.

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Flashback: In 2009, Time Saw GOP As ‘Endangered Species’ Unless Party Moved Left

With all but one of the House races now resolved, Republicans have picked up at least 63 seats, the most in a midterm election since 1938. So, it might be fun on this Thanksgiving Day to recall how, just 18 months ago, Time's Michael Grunwald was arguing in a big cover story that demography and its “extremely conservative” philosophy meant the Republican Party could be on the verge of extinction. Back in May 2009, Newsbusters Brent Baker picked up on Grunwald's piece for the ridiculous way he painted the GOP as extremist: They are extremely conservative ideas tarred by association with the extremely unpopular George W. Bush, who helped downsize the party to its extremely conservative base. But re-reading the piece today, it's even more striking how Grunwald's “analysis” was based on liberal wishful thinking that small government conservative policies were like political arsenic, and how Republicans had to drop tax cuts and cultural conservatism if they ever hoped to come back from the wilderness. In other words, move left. But the GOP instead moved right, and was rewarded by voters. Which is why conservatives should probably not take strategic advice from their ideological adversaries in the media. read more

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As I watched the whole TSA swarm descend on the media and Internet over the past month, I was surprised at the violent reaction from the left AND right on airport screenings. Blowing this issue up right before the holidays seemed to be a Tea Party tactic from beginning to end, as far as I was concerned. Mark Ames and Yasha Levine at The Nation contended in a post yesterday that the current publicity surge was orchestrated and magnified by organizations with ties to Koch Industries. With one exception, they list a solid trail that leads back to organizations with a vested interest in: a) discrediting government agencies and the TSA specifically; and b) discrediting the current administration’s ability to handle national security. Unfortunately, they led off the article by trying to link up John Tyner (“Don’t Touch My Junk”) with these organizations, and as many critics have pointed out, there is no “there”, there. Glenn Greenwald : As for his standing accused by The Nation of suspicion on the grounds of his avowed libertarianism, consider what he wrote several weeks before the TSA incident. In a post responding to this question — “When’s the last time you were seriously inconvenienced or injured by something that big government did?” — Tyner wrote: Gay rights [infringements], TSA body scanners, highway checkpoints, the PATRIOT Act, warrantless wiretaps, extra-judicial assassinations, indefinite detentions, inflation, etc. Don’t tell me that (some of) these don’t affect me. When one person’s rights are trampled, everybody’s are, and that’s just at the federal level. What a right-wing monster! If only Democratic Party leaders — who support most of the serious rights infringements he condemns — were this monstrous. Or consider what he wrote about the statements of Juan Williams and Bill O’Reilly which conflated Muslims with Terrorists: ( read the rest ) Jeremy Scahill : The article my magazine, The Nation, published about John Tyner is a shameful smear While I tend to agree with his criticism of their opening focus on John Tyner, and particularly the authors’ focus on personal details of Tyner’s education and background as evidence of his bias, that should not automatically disqualify the balance of their article, where they list at least six other connections which are solid and easily documented. The authors responded to Greenwald’s criticism late Wednesday , writing: We believe that Tyner is in all likelihood innocent in his motives, but our larger point is that his discourse and the movement that has embraced it is far from innocent. In focusing entirely on our characterization of Tyner, Greenwald ignores the larger thrust of our argument and the vast majority of the evidence assembled in the piece, leaving a distorted impression of it. On this point, I agree. Their article would have been stronger without any reference or only a mere passing reference to John Tyner. I don’t believe anyone is arguing that the TSA is perfect, that their scanners are the best we have to offer, or that body searches are not a violation of civil liberties. I certainly am not. At the same time, these issues are not new. It isn’t as though patdowns are a new procedure in effect as of this holiday. They’ve been doing them for years. So why now? Why when there are so many important issues on the table, is this one taking the center stage. Levine and Ames have the same question: Here is what the article really said: Like many Americans, we found the TSA’s intrusive procedures offensive and we are against the invasive pat-downs and attack on our civil liberties. This was a given in our article, and we stated as much. What our article did was look beyond the obvious surface, into possible reasons why this particular issue suddenly rose to forefront of the national debate, when dozens of other, more pressing issues are getting so little attention–people being kicked out of their homes and living on the street because of fraudulent foreclosures, a massive wealth transfer from struggling Americans to the financial sector, ongoing wars that are bankrupting the country and killing thousands, the attack on public education and so on. They found enough connections inside and outside of Congress to warrant a report on it. Unfortunately, the gist of their findings has been lost in the larger anger over a) the tenuous linking to John Tyner; and b) the overall outrage over enhanced TSA screening procedures. Here’s what bothers me. This smelled like an overblown PR effort from the get-go. Again, I am NOT saying there aren’t problems, but this happening right now when more people are flying home to family and friends for the holidays is not coincidental. It’s just not. Now The Nation has linked the “OptOut” campaign to astroturf sources, but is still getting a complete smackdown by those who would ordinarily pay attention because…why? The anti-TSA campaign began in early November, and gained traction just in the nick of time for Thanksgiving travel. Absent from the debate on the left side of the aisle was any discussion about where employees of the TSA stand with regard to unionizing (they have not had a chance to vote on a union to represent them yet); about the clamor for privatization despite the fact that privatization has failed once; whether those employees were properly trained and whether the actual stories told were factual or not. We know Meg McLain’s was a complete fabrication. We know the guy headlined by Drudge actually cooperated with authorities. So what is so unreasonable about linking up agendas with what certainly appears to be a well-timed and carefully crafted campaign? Isn’t there a way to both acknowledge the issues inherent with these TSA screening procedures AND the idea that it’s being capitalized upon for political gain? To many, it seems to be a zero-sum game. If one doesn’t choose to accept the premise that this entire brouhaha is an organic swarm commanding attention because of self-inflicted TSA incompetence — malevolence, even — from a government intent on invading every single aspect of our lives and killing the constitution, then in Greenwald’s estimation we must be “centro-facist” party hacks falling into lockstep and yessing every move with no regard for facts, liberties, or any combination thereof. And that conclusion would exclude any possibility at all that there was, in fact, a PR push to make this a Very Big Issue at a time where a lot of people would be affected and view the TSA, and by extension, this administration in a negative light. I do believe the TSA has bungled their handling of airport security. I do believe they believe they’re doing what they’re called to do, but doing it badly and without regard to people’s rights. I also believe those errors were capitalized upon by people with agendas and money who set a PR machine in motion to score political points and ultimately political victories which also will disregard our rights and liberties. For Glenn Greenwald and others, this is less important than what the TSA is doing right now. He acknowledges the possibility that the six different instances cited by The Nation may have been true and factual, but for him, the mention and “smear” (his words, not mine) of John Tyner supercede any validity the other 3/4ths of their piece may have had. It may be that several vocal opponents of the new TSA process are Koch-funded — that wouldn’t surprise me — but that has absolutely nothing to do with Tyner, and The Nation, for which I have high regard, owes him an apology and retraction for the innuendo it smeared on him without a shred of evidence. Nothing is absolute. It’s likely that all dynamics are at work. Without the work of The Nation’s reporters, we would be missing a piece of the larger picture. How are we harmed by that, and why shouldn’t it be weighted with more than a passing nod tossed in a maelstrom of biting criticism?

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Lou Dobbs a great fit at Fox: Distorting and lying about DREAM Act is part of the job

Click here to view this media Bill Hemmer sure was excited to get to greet Lou Dobbs to the Fox News network yesterday: “What in the world took you so long, man? We’ve been waiting for ya!” And you could see why, immediately. Because Hemmer had already given intentionally false information to his viewers about the DREAM Act, which was the segment’s real subject: He claimed that it “grants citizenship” to students whose parents brought them here as children. This is, of course, a lie : In fact, the versions of the DREAM Act pending in the House and Senate both state that eligible unauthorized immigrants could have their status adjusted to “conditional permanent resident status,” which “shall be valid for a period of 6 years” and subject to termination should the immigrant cease to be eligible. Following the 6-year period, Dream Act immigrants would have to meet further requirements to gain permanent resident status and could only apply for citizenship (provided they meet further requirements) after they obtained such status. Fox anchors, as MM notes, have also been claiming that the DREAM Act would allow some immigrants to “jump right to the front of the line.” This too is a lie. And you see that chryon in the screen grab? The one that describes the DREAM Act as an “immigration overhaul”? Absurdly false: The DREAM Act is only a very narrowly tailored bit of immigration legislation designed to resolve a small sliver of the issue — a far, far stretch from an “immigration overhaul” as in comprehensive immigration reform. But none of this bothers Lou Dobbs, who you may recall was vowing to reform his Latino-bashing ways while still between contracts . That was good until he got the Fox gig. Now he not only is happy to let Hemmer’s blatant misrepresentations of the DREAM Act stand, he’s happy to regurgitate them and then blame Democrats for even daring to bring the issue up. Dobbs openly admits he’s reading almost directly from the phony talking points being distributed by Sen. Jeff Sessions, R- KKK Mississippi. But as Jackie Mahendra at America’s Voice explains, these talking points are lies mounted upon falsehoods with some distortion thrown in for good measure: The controversy comes after his office circulated a white paper that is currently reverberating throughout the conservative echo chamber, in which Sessions mixes anti-immigrant fear-mongering (see: “criminal aliens”) with f actually inaccurate assertions about the legislation and its implications. Session’s spokesman Stephen Miller told Fox News: “The scope of this proposal is enormous, extending amnesty to millions of illegal immigrants including a number who have committed serious crimes, incentivizing further illegality.” In truth, the DREAM Act is a narrowly-tailored and traditionally bipartisan piece of legislation that ensures that only those with strong moral character qualify. As such, it would strengthen the military, bolster future economic competitiveness, and offer American taxpayers a r eturn on their investment in hard-working immigrant kids who want to give back to the nation they love and call home. There is a wide gulf between extremists like Sessions and sensible Americans who recognize the importance of DREAM. In fact, 70% of the American people support the DREAM Act . The DREAM Act’s many champions include Senators Richard Lugar (R-IN) and Dick Durbin (D-IL) and Representatives Lincoln Diaz-Balart (R-FL), Howard Berman (D-CA), Lucille Roybal-Allard (D-CA), and Luis Gutierrez (D-IL). Rep. Mike Honda (D-CA) has a piece today in Politico , in which he asks: If you knew that passing legislation to allow 2.1 million American students to pursue higher education or military service, our government could collect $3.6 trillion over the next 40 years, would you do it? According to The Economist : The DREAM Act sends the message that although American immigration law in effect tries to make water run uphill, we are not monsters. It says that we will not hobble the prospects of young people raised and schooled in America just because we were so perverse to demand that their parents wait in a line before a door that never opens. It signals that we were once a nation of immigrants, and even if we have become too fearful and small to properly honour that noble legacy, America in some small way remains a land of opportunity. It’s a smart piece of legislation, and we’re 100 percent behind its passage. Of course, its smartness is a virtual guarantee that Republicans like those at Fox — and especially Lou Dobbs — will oppose it.

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Iraq’s PM to begin forming new Cabinet

BAGHDAD – An official in the Iraqi president’s office says the president will officially ask incumbent Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to form the next government. The long-awaited announcement, which is expected on Thursday, is part of a deal to end an eight-month deadlock over who would lead the country following the inconclusive March 7 elections. The official from President Jalal Talabani’s office spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to the media. Al-Maliki will then have 30 days to form his Cabinet – a challenging task considering the competing interests vying for power in Iraq. The new government is…

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Minn. Lawmaker Stopped with Gun by Abortion Clinic

Click here to view this media According to the Minnesota Star Tribune , this dumbass has now had his leadership post taken away by the state GOP. Via Pat Kessler, WCCO-TV : ST. PAUL (WCCO) — A Minnesota lawmaker is trying to explain why he showed up at a Planned Parenthood with a loaded gun. He says he just happened to pick that parking lot. Surveillance cameras at the Planned Parenthood in St. Paul spotted Representative Tom Hackbarth of Cedar, Minn., parking his pickup and getting out with a .38 Smith and Wesson on his right hip. Hackbarth, who is a new chairman of the House Environment and Natural Resources Committee, told WCCO-TV by telephone he had “no clue” he’d parked next to a security-conscious abortion facility. Hackbarth has been suspended from any current and pending leadership roles within the House GOP Caucus, according to a released statement from the Minnesota House of Representatives. The statement goes on to say his suspension will remain in effect until the issue is fully resolved. The Republican representative said a romance that started online put him in the wrong place. “I have a permit to carry legally. I carry my gun all the time. I have never had an incident and everything is perfectly legal and above board,” said Hackbarth. Cameras caught him walking away down a dark alley. “We have to air our dirty laundry? My wife and I are going through a divorce we are separated. We’ve been separated for about a year and a half now,” said Hackbarth. Hackbarth was apparently on the hunt for his girlfriend whom he’d recently met online. “She gave me some line of baloney, and I thought, ‘well, she’s fibbing to me.’ You could tell, and I thought, ‘well, I’m going to check it out.’ and I went there to see if she was around and her vehicle was not there. And I was just checking on her,” he said. The police report says he may have been jealous about another man, which is something Hackbarth denies. Police say Hackbarth exhibited the behavior of a stalker: angry, looking for a woman, with a fully loaded gun. They stopped his truck, handcuffed him and took his weapon that night, but he was never charged with a crime. He picked up his gun Tuesday.

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Sarah Palin: We’ve got to stand with our North Korean allies

Click here to view this media During today’s Glenn Beck radio show Sarah had to be corrected by the host on the current hostilities between the two Koreas. CO-HOST: How would you handle a situation like the one that just developed in North Korea? PALIN: But obviously, we’ve got to stand with our North Korean allies. We’re bound to by treaty – CO-HOST: South Korean. PALIN: Eh, Yeah. And we’re also bound by prudence to stand with our South Korean allies, yes. A slip of the tongue? Maybe, maybe not. But in John Heilemann & Mark Halperin’s Game Change there was this telling point which suggests otherwise. She knew nothing. She had to be taken through World War I, World War II, the Cold War, and Palin was not aware there was a difference between North and South Korea. She continued to insist that Iraq was behind 9/11; and when her son was being sent off to Iraq, she couldn’t describe who we were fighting.

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Obama: ‘I don’t think about Sarah Palin’

Click here to view this media In an interview set to air Friday, ABC’s Barbara Walters tried and failed to pull President Barack Obama into a debate with Sarah Palin. “You may have heard that Sarah Palin told me just last week that she could beat you if she ran,” Walters told Obama . “Could she?” “You know, I don’t speculate on what’s going to happen two years from now,” Obama replied. “You will not tell me that you can beat Sarah Palin?” Walters pressed. “What I’m saying is I don’t think about Sarah Palin,” the president confessed. “Obviously Sarah Palin has a strong base of support in the Republican Party and I respect those skills,” Obama continued. “But I spend most of my time right now on how I can be the best possible president. And my attitude has always been, from the day I started this job that if I do a good job and if I’m delivering for the American people the politics will take care of itself.” “If I falter and the American people are dissatisfied, then I’ll have problems,” he said. But Obama didn’t convince Good Morning America host George Stephanopoulos. “I don’t think the president’s telling the entire truth there,” Stephanopoulos told ABC’s Robin Roberts following a clip of the Obama interview. “He thinks a little bit about Sarah Palin.” Walters had gotten the debate started in an interview with Palin that aired earlier in the week. “If you ran for president, could you beat Barack Obama?” Walters asked Palin. “I believe so,” Palin admitted. While Palin told Walters she was undecided about whether to run in 2012, the British newspaper Guardian reported Sunday that her staff has been scouting for office space in Iowa. “In the course of making arrangements for that tour, two aides organising Palin’s visit to Des Moines on November 27 told locals they were looking into office space and other logistical needs for the coming year,” the Guardian observed.

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Bill O’Reilly and Glenn Beck are confused by Jimmy Carter’s claims that Fox distorts the news: Who, us?

Click here to view this media Bill O’Reilly really hates it when people call out Fox News for being the compulsively mendacious and congenitally vicious propaganda organ it’s become. The other day on his Fox show, he and Glenn Beck puzzled over why Jimmy Carter would go on CNN and say this : The talk shows with Glenn Beck and others on Fox News, I think, have deliberately distorted the news and it’s become highly competitive. And I have, my Republican friends say that MSNBC might be just as biased on the other side in supporting the Democratic Party, the liberal element. This had O’Reilly and Beck rubbing their double chins : O’REILLY: Right. But it’s not the first time that he’s done this, all right, that intentionally distort the news. What is he talking about? Do you know? BECK: No, I have no idea what he’s talking about. I mean, look, Bill, have you ever made mistakes on the air? O’REILLY: Yes. BECK: You correct them? O’REILLY: Shirley Sherrod. BECK: Yes. O’REILLY: I made a mistake. In fact, it’s interesting. I mentioned this earlier. O’REILLY: No, I made the mistake. I didn’t check it out. BECK: I know that. But so did the White House. (CROSSTALK) O’REILLY: Don’t point to other bad behavior to excuse your own. I didn’t use the Mrs. Bush sound bite on Sarah Palin tonight… BECK: Yes. O’REILLY: …because I don’t know what context that’s in. I learned my lesson on Shirley Sherrod. You made a couple of mistakes. Van Jones, you said he was a convicted felon. But you corrected it? BECK: As soon as we found out, I corrected it. O’REILLY: Right. BECK: He’s not — he went to jail but he wasn’t a convicted felon. Where to start? OK, first things first: Beck still has this wrong. Jones was mistakenly arrested and immediately released — he didn’t “go to jail” other than a brief stint in a holding cell. Indeed, his whole narrative about Jones taking part in the Rodney King riots was an utter fabrication, as Eva Patterson explained at the time in the HuffPo : This is what really happened. On May 8, 1992, the week AFTER the Rodney King disturbances, I sent a staff attorney and Van out to be legal monitors at a peaceful march in San Francisco. The local police, perhaps understandably nervous, stopped the march and arrested hundreds of people — including all the legal monitors. The matter was quickly sorted out; Van and my staff attorney were released within a few hours. All charges against them were dropped. Van was part of a successful class action lawsuit later; the City of San Francisco ultimately compensated him financially for his unjust arrest (a rare outcome). So the unwarranted arrest at a peaceful march — for which the charges were dropped and for which Van was financially compensated — is the sole basis for the smear that he is some kind of dangerous criminal. Note that this was pointed out to Beck in August 2009. Media Matters pointed it out too, and did so repeatedly. We pointed it out in October. Yet it was actually four whole months after he first said it that he finally corrected it. Four months was “as soon as” Beck knew about it? Only if his “crack” staff refuses to read its most high-profile public critics — which, truth be told, is conceivable, but unlikely. Not to mention absurdly incompetent. Sometimes I think Beck is so mentally disturbed he genuinely believes the lies he tells. But this performance was something special: Lying about his lies, lying about the corrections to his lies, and lying even in the act of making a correction. That’s what you call the liar’s trifecta. At the time, we pointed out just a few of the corrections Beck could run: — That nefarious Diego Rivera painting in the Rockefeller Center? It was removed on Rockefeller’s orders. (Heck, just watch Cradle Will Rock sometime; the painting figures prominently in the plot.) — Those 1.7 million protesters who showed up for the 9-12 event? Um, dude, it was closer to 60,000 . Little bitta difference there. — Just like Van Jones, Peter Orszag isn’t a “czar.” He passed congressional approval. — UAW workers do not make $154 an hour. — Unions do not, as you’ve claimed, need only 30 percent approval from employees in order to be established. It’s still the usual 51 percent. — Those “doors replaced with stimulus funds? They were hangar doors. And they didn’t cost “$1.4 million.” More like $256,100. Again, bitta difference. — Contrary to your claim that “only 3 percent” of the stimulus plan would be spent in its first year, the actual plan calls for closer to 21 percent of the plan spent in the first seven-and-a-half months alone. — Just because we can breathe it doesn’t disqualify carbon dioxide from consideration as a pollutant — particularly at high levels. You breathe carbon monoxide in nontoxic quantities all the time, too. — Contrary to your sneering claim , Paul Krugman not only didn’t miss the housing bubble, he was one of the few to be warning about it long in advance. That was in October 2009, covering just his first nine months at Fox. Since then, he’s expanded the list exponentially.

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I’m very sorry to hear this . But then, I’m very sorry to hear whenever anyone loses their job, and I’m even sorrier to hear that someone’s unemployment benefits have run out — and that no one seems to give a damn, not enough to do anything about it: Nobody is safe. Velma Hart, who burst onto the media scene after telling President Obama she was scared about her financial future, has been laid off. Hart was let go as the chief financial officer for Am Vets, a nonprofit Maryland-based veteran services organization. Hart has become another casualty of the tough economy in which so many people have lost their jobs. “It’s not anything she did,” said Jim King, the national executive director of Am Vets. “She got bit by the same snake that has bit a lot of people. It was a move to cut our bottom line. Most not-for-profits are seeing their money pinched.” King would not say whether the organization had had other layoffs. “Velma was a good employee,” he said. “It was just a matter of looking at the bottom line and where could we make the best cuts and survive.” King hadn’t seen the irony in Hart being fired just two months after she emotionally told Obama about her fears for her own financial well-being during a town hall meeting in Washington.

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