The mystery cat who took the media by storm this week isn’t such a mystery anymore: An alert reader of Gothamist wrote in to reveal the secret biography of Willow, who turned up in New York years after going missing in Colorado. Turns out the New York Times ’ guess…
Continue reading …Mike Lofgren spent 30 years on Capitol Hill working for Republicans before publicly leaving the party last week . Responding to Lofgren’s denunciation of the Grand Old Party as a “cult,” Andrew Sullivan agrees that the GOP, deep down, is behaving as a religious movement, not as a political party, and a radical religious movement at that. Lofgren sees the “Prosperity Gospel” as a divine blessing for personal enrichment and minimal taxation (yes, that kind of Gospel is compatible with Rand, just not compatible with the actual Gospels); for military power (with a major emphasis on the punitive, interventionist God of the Old Testament); and for radical change and contempt for existing institutions (as a product of End-Times thinking, intensified after 9/11). And so this political deadlock conceals a religious war at its heart. Why after all should one abandon or compromise sacred truths? And for those whose Christianity can only be sustained by denial of modern complexity, of scientific knowledge, and of what scholarly studies of the Bible’s origins have revealed, this fusion of political and spiritual lives into one seamless sensibility and culture, is irresistible. And public reminders of modernity – that, say, many Americans do not celebrate Christmas, that gay people have human needs, that America will soon be a majority-minority country and China will overtake the US in GDP by mid-century – are terribly threatening. I have written several times on this topic, but one must be careful with generalizations. To be sure, tea party and Fox News propaganda aim squarely at distinct cultural identities: think of Bill O’Reilly’s “war on Christmas.” But there’s no single religion at the heart of tea party or Republican cultural values. For example, I have seen lots of speculation as to whether America is ready to elect a Latter Day Saint, Mitt Romney, president. The “more spiritual than political” Glenn Beck rallies have sought to syncretize doctrinal differences into the kind of mushy, right wing unitarianism. The new Republican Party is marked by Michele Bachmann leaving her anti-papist church as well as Rick Perry’s prayer meetings. I agree with Sullivan that all this marks the downfall of evangelicalism in America, as the book of Rand has been inserted between Romans and Revelations. But I’m not sure you can describe the religion of the new right in a monolithic way. Instead, it may actually be more instructive to regard the Republican party as a brand, and the tea party as a new, competing brand from within the same corporation. Think of New Coke. For this purpose, I’ll turn things over to Patrick Hanlon for a minute; he’s a branding guru. “Branding” is the business of making products succeed in markets, which is far more complicated than just advertising. As Hanlon explains, brands are actually belief systems . More after the jump… One might ask what the real difference is between a religion and a marketing exercise, and in fact conservative politics today are a business , rife with profit-taking . But a fair examination must go deeper than that. Tea party activists and right-wing evangelicals want to believe . That is, their belief systems are bulwarks of rationalization . Like cult members, they invest in that system and become party to it. For his purposes, Hanlon identifies seven parts to a belief system: A CREATION STORY We know that tea parties began as a Ron Paul moneybomb experiment, were picked up as a meme by K-Street firms, were propelled by conservative media, and became the new marching banner for the same old right-wing conservatism — especially evangelicals. Indeed, tea party activism has consistently shed its libertarian origins, which is why Michele Bachmann has been more popular than Ron Paul among tea party adherents. But tea party members don’t like this narrative (indeed, many of them reject it), preferring to ignore the role of Republican and conservative policy shops in creating their “grassroots” phenomenon. For its part, the mainstream media has swallowed their creation story whole and unquestioning. One example of this is the general acceptance of capitalization for “Tea Party.” Note to the media: there is no The Tea Party. The NAACP tracks at least six major national tea party organizations . Infighting is common: some groups want to separate from FreedomWorks to maintain their indie spirit, while Tea Party Patriots and Tea Party Express have disdained each other at times. All of this goes on while the capitalized Republican Party seems diminished as a party of big ideas. A CREED Meanwhile, the creation story of the Republican Party has become moribund. Indeed, the advance of tea parties has happened in a vacuum left by the collapse of modern conservatism. William F. Buckley’s brand of conservatism has its last homes with David Frum and Andrew Sullivan. Rational conservatism, and the party it used to inform, have been overtaken by a movement in the grip of magical thinking and paranoid fantasy. Buckley ejected Bircherism from the Big Tent in 1964; it is back, and driving the party. I need hardly recite the tea party litany of paranoid memes and silly tinfoil hattery. It suffices to recall a button for sale at Tea Party Express rallies: WHY? Spend money we don’t have to build cars we don’t want to end man-made global warming that doesn’t exist That is a fully enclosed paranoid universe where the ice is not melting, the government is too big, and freedom is threatened by change. Moreover, the fundament of this “epistemic closure” is lies. Websites like Crooks & Liars, Media Matters, and Newshounds offer a virtual catalog of examples. I am not the first commentator to note the narrowed range of acceptability in Republican politics these days. Ron Paul was both cheered for letting the uninsured die and booed for apostasy on Islamophobia by the same crowd the other night. John Huntsman is running dead last because he admits that climate change is not a hoax; Rick Perry is running first because he says climate change is the hoax. If you don’t recite the creed, then you sit in the dark, cold corner of the “big tent.” RITUALS Tax Day tea parties. Tea Party Express bus stops. The tea party convention and tea parties at town halls. Remember the tea party rally on the National Mall in September 2009? FreedomWorks claimed that two million people showed up. FreedomWorks revised its figure down to merely 600,000 people, but that is still a lie. In fact, it is physically impossible for the crowd to have been larger than a tenth that size . Nevertheless, the lie was repeated at subsequent tea party events, permanently informing their cultural lore. It was a naked play for the “bandwagoning” effect: cultural conservatives were fed the appearance of a strong, active movement, and responded. At revivals, Billy Graham’s crusaders used to emerge “spontaneously” from the edges of the crowd to create the altar call rush. Rituals are “magic;” science understands it as psychology. Rituals are aimed at the unbeliever, too. Recently, Digby wrote about ritual defamation , quoting an article on the topic: The power of ritual defamation lies entirely in its capacity to intimidate and terrorize. It embraces some elements of primitive superstitious belief, as in a “curse” or “hex.” It plays into the subconscious fear most people have of being abandoned or rejected by the tribe or by society and being cut off from social and psychological support systems. Digby remarks on the way ritual defamation instills fear in liberals: “that they will be rejected by the American people — and a subconscious dulling of passion and inspiration in the mistaken belief that they can spare themselves further humiliation if only they control their rhetoric.” Rituals force witnesses toward the sacred with fear. ICONS Rituals also create habits. When Democracy Corps did a series of focus-groups with Georgia conservatives (.PDF) in October of 2009, they found that more than half of respondents watched Glenn Beck, or tried to watch him, every weekday. He was their Mecca, so to speak. For beyond the silly historic garb and Gadsden flags, the icons of the movement are mostly people. Remember, this tackier, paranoid conservatism emerged at Sarah Palin’s rallies on the 2008 campaign trail before most Americans had ever heard of tea parties. Look at the freshman class of the Republican Party, both in Congress and in state legislatures. Demographically, they are no different from their more experienced caucus colleagues. Rhetorically, they are louder and hotter: it is their brand . They are the emerging icons of the “new” old conservatism. SACRED WORDS Calling the Republican Party a “cult” is another way of saying that culture warriors dominate it. Language is a primary ingredient of culture, and the wholesale adoption of conservative language by tea parties is a telling indicator of what tea parties are. Think of the words and phrases common between the GOP and tea parties: freedom . Smaller government . Private enterprise . Free markets . Lower taxes . And so on. A phrase like “personal responsibility” invokes traditional American virtues and values — as George Lakoff would say, it activates their conservative brains. Put another way, the sacred words of conservatism resonate with their cultural identity. This is a distinct idea from dog whistles, however, which are about the profane. NON-BELIEVERS Brands make almost as much effort to define what they aren’t as what they are. Like hideous masks meant to scare off demons, the ugly signage of tea parties speaks to what they fear: foreigners, blacks, immigrants, “socialists.” Rush Limbaugh has made an entire career out of abusing the word “liberal” to identify what he isn’t. He has always styled himself the Mac to a liberal PC, though in his case the letters stand for political correctness . One of the reasons why tea parties, and hence Republicans, have become more offensive and bold is that they actively reject “political correctness.” Tolerance and multiculturalism are the infidel’s marks. LEADERS WHO STRUGGLE Charismatic figures always have a bio of personal victory over adversity. But there are many conservative leaders who actively work to build a false image of struggle: George Bush, all hat and no cattle, cutting brush on his dude ranch. Glenn Beck wearing a bulletproof vest at his rally. Sarah Palin “roughing it” and shooting wildlife. Michele Bachmann’s indeterminate number of foster children. CONCLUSION Of course, all of this is what you might expect from a Republican party and a conservative movement that have perfected the arts of their communication. Frank Luntz has focus-grouped phrases with every intention of seeing them added to the creed. Entire constellations of conservative organizations, many of them now hip-deep in tea parties, have been pushing the new religion of the righteous for decades. And that is what many commentators find most disturbing about Lofgren’s disaffection: political religion has stripped itself of redeeming virtues. In this great moment of reactionary culture, the belief system that drives Republican politics is turning radioactive.
Continue reading …Mike Lofgren spent 30 years on Capitol Hill working for Republicans before publicly leaving the party last week . Responding to Lofgren’s denunciation of the Grand Old Party as a “cult,” Andrew Sullivan agrees that the GOP, deep down, is behaving as a religious movement, not as a political party, and a radical religious movement at that. Lofgren sees the “Prosperity Gospel” as a divine blessing for personal enrichment and minimal taxation (yes, that kind of Gospel is compatible with Rand, just not compatible with the actual Gospels); for military power (with a major emphasis on the punitive, interventionist God of the Old Testament); and for radical change and contempt for existing institutions (as a product of End-Times thinking, intensified after 9/11). And so this political deadlock conceals a religious war at its heart. Why after all should one abandon or compromise sacred truths? And for those whose Christianity can only be sustained by denial of modern complexity, of scientific knowledge, and of what scholarly studies of the Bible’s origins have revealed, this fusion of political and spiritual lives into one seamless sensibility and culture, is irresistible. And public reminders of modernity – that, say, many Americans do not celebrate Christmas, that gay people have human needs, that America will soon be a majority-minority country and China will overtake the US in GDP by mid-century – are terribly threatening. I have written several times on this topic, but one must be careful with generalizations. To be sure, tea party and Fox News propaganda aim squarely at distinct cultural identities: think of Bill O’Reilly’s “war on Christmas.” But there’s no single religion at the heart of tea party or Republican cultural values. For example, I have seen lots of speculation as to whether America is ready to elect a Latter Day Saint, Mitt Romney, president. The “more spiritual than political” Glenn Beck rallies have sought to syncretize doctrinal differences into the kind of mushy, right wing unitarianism. The new Republican Party is marked by Michele Bachmann leaving her anti-papist church as well as Rick Perry’s prayer meetings. I agree with Sullivan that all this marks the downfall of evangelicalism in America, as the book of Rand has been inserted between Romans and Revelations. But I’m not sure you can describe the religion of the new right in a monolithic way. Instead, it may actually be more instructive to regard the Republican party as a brand, and the tea party as a new, competing brand from within the same corporation. Think of New Coke. For this purpose, I’ll turn things over to Patrick Hanlon for a minute; he’s a branding guru. “Branding” is the business of making products succeed in markets, which is far more complicated than just advertising. As Hanlon explains, brands are actually belief systems . More after the jump… One might ask what the real difference is between a religion and a marketing exercise, and in fact conservative politics today are a business , rife with profit-taking . But a fair examination must go deeper than that. Tea party activists and right-wing evangelicals want to believe . That is, their belief systems are bulwarks of rationalization . Like cult members, they invest in that system and become party to it. For his purposes, Hanlon identifies seven parts to a belief system: A CREATION STORY We know that tea parties began as a Ron Paul moneybomb experiment, were picked up as a meme by K-Street firms, were propelled by conservative media, and became the new marching banner for the same old right-wing conservatism — especially evangelicals. Indeed, tea party activism has consistently shed its libertarian origins, which is why Michele Bachmann has been more popular than Ron Paul among tea party adherents. But tea party members don’t like this narrative (indeed, many of them reject it), preferring to ignore the role of Republican and conservative policy shops in creating their “grassroots” phenomenon. For its part, the mainstream media has swallowed their creation story whole and unquestioning. One example of this is the general acceptance of capitalization for “Tea Party.” Note to the media: there is no The Tea Party. The NAACP tracks at least six major national tea party organizations . Infighting is common: some groups want to separate from FreedomWorks to maintain their indie spirit, while Tea Party Patriots and Tea Party Express have disdained each other at times. All of this goes on while the capitalized Republican Party seems diminished as a party of big ideas. A CREED Meanwhile, the creation story of the Republican Party has become moribund. Indeed, the advance of tea parties has happened in a vacuum left by the collapse of modern conservatism. William F. Buckley’s brand of conservatism has its last homes with David Frum and Andrew Sullivan. Rational conservatism, and the party it used to inform, have been overtaken by a movement in the grip of magical thinking and paranoid fantasy. Buckley ejected Bircherism from the Big Tent in 1964; it is back, and driving the party. I need hardly recite the tea party litany of paranoid memes and silly tinfoil hattery. It suffices to recall a button for sale at Tea Party Express rallies: WHY? Spend money we don’t have to build cars we don’t want to end man-made global warming that doesn’t exist That is a fully enclosed paranoid universe where the ice is not melting, the government is too big, and freedom is threatened by change. Moreover, the fundament of this “epistemic closure” is lies. Websites like Crooks & Liars, Media Matters, and Newshounds offer a virtual catalog of examples. I am not the first commentator to note the narrowed range of acceptability in Republican politics these days. Ron Paul was both cheered for letting the uninsured die and booed for apostasy on Islamophobia by the same crowd the other night. John Huntsman is running dead last because he admits that climate change is not a hoax; Rick Perry is running first because he says climate change is the hoax. If you don’t recite the creed, then you sit in the dark, cold corner of the “big tent.” RITUALS Tax Day tea parties. Tea Party Express bus stops. The tea party convention and tea parties at town halls. Remember the tea party rally on the National Mall in September 2009? FreedomWorks claimed that two million people showed up. FreedomWorks revised its figure down to merely 600,000 people, but that is still a lie. In fact, it is physically impossible for the crowd to have been larger than a tenth that size . Nevertheless, the lie was repeated at subsequent tea party events, permanently informing their cultural lore. It was a naked play for the “bandwagoning” effect: cultural conservatives were fed the appearance of a strong, active movement, and responded. At revivals, Billy Graham’s crusaders used to emerge “spontaneously” from the edges of the crowd to create the altar call rush. Rituals are “magic;” science understands it as psychology. Rituals are aimed at the unbeliever, too. Recently, Digby wrote about ritual defamation , quoting an article on the topic: The power of ritual defamation lies entirely in its capacity to intimidate and terrorize. It embraces some elements of primitive superstitious belief, as in a “curse” or “hex.” It plays into the subconscious fear most people have of being abandoned or rejected by the tribe or by society and being cut off from social and psychological support systems. Digby remarks on the way ritual defamation instills fear in liberals: “that they will be rejected by the American people — and a subconscious dulling of passion and inspiration in the mistaken belief that they can spare themselves further humiliation if only they control their rhetoric.” Rituals force witnesses toward the sacred with fear. ICONS Rituals also create habits. When Democracy Corps did a series of focus-groups with Georgia conservatives (.PDF) in October of 2009, they found that more than half of respondents watched Glenn Beck, or tried to watch him, every weekday. He was their Mecca, so to speak. For beyond the silly historic garb and Gadsden flags, the icons of the movement are mostly people. Remember, this tackier, paranoid conservatism emerged at Sarah Palin’s rallies on the 2008 campaign trail before most Americans had ever heard of tea parties. Look at the freshman class of the Republican Party, both in Congress and in state legislatures. Demographically, they are no different from their more experienced caucus colleagues. Rhetorically, they are louder and hotter: it is their brand . They are the emerging icons of the “new” old conservatism. SACRED WORDS Calling the Republican Party a “cult” is another way of saying that culture warriors dominate it. Language is a primary ingredient of culture, and the wholesale adoption of conservative language by tea parties is a telling indicator of what tea parties are. Think of the words and phrases common between the GOP and tea parties: freedom . Smaller government . Private enterprise . Free markets . Lower taxes . And so on. A phrase like “personal responsibility” invokes traditional American virtues and values — as George Lakoff would say, it activates their conservative brains. Put another way, the sacred words of conservatism resonate with their cultural identity. This is a distinct idea from dog whistles, however, which are about the profane. NON-BELIEVERS Brands make almost as much effort to define what they aren’t as what they are. Like hideous masks meant to scare off demons, the ugly signage of tea parties speaks to what they fear: foreigners, blacks, immigrants, “socialists.” Rush Limbaugh has made an entire career out of abusing the word “liberal” to identify what he isn’t. He has always styled himself the Mac to a liberal PC, though in his case the letters stand for political correctness . One of the reasons why tea parties, and hence Republicans, have become more offensive and bold is that they actively reject “political correctness.” Tolerance and multiculturalism are the infidel’s marks. LEADERS WHO STRUGGLE Charismatic figures always have a bio of personal victory over adversity. But there are many conservative leaders who actively work to build a false image of struggle: George Bush, all hat and no cattle, cutting brush on his dude ranch. Glenn Beck wearing a bulletproof vest at his rally. Sarah Palin “roughing it” and shooting wildlife. Michele Bachmann’s indeterminate number of foster children. CONCLUSION Of course, all of this is what you might expect from a Republican party and a conservative movement that have perfected the arts of their communication. Frank Luntz has focus-grouped phrases with every intention of seeing them added to the creed. Entire constellations of conservative organizations, many of them now hip-deep in tea parties, have been pushing the new religion of the righteous for decades. And that is what many commentators find most disturbing about Lofgren’s disaffection: political religion has stripped itself of redeeming virtues. In this great moment of reactionary culture, the belief system that drives Republican politics is turning radioactive.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media OK, so most of our readers know about the loss of Wiener’s old NY-26 seat in a special election to a tea party candidate named Bob Turner. But what you may not know is that a new tactic is emerging that will surely be used against Obama and the Democratic Party in the run-up to the 2012 election unless the President puts out the flames of the fire he has started with his grand bargain scheme—which includes reforms to our social safety nets. I caught this via Digby: That race in NY this week featured a lot of talk about Israel and a whole lot of analysis about ethnicity and demographics. But one thing very few have noticed was an important piece of standard 2010 messaging . Dave Weigel did: In two robocalls, Koch promised voters that Turner wouldn’t cut Medicare or Social Security. The weekend before the election, Hikind said the same thing, and bolstered his case by saying Democrats were risking the programs: Dave Weigel: Actually, this disastrous election gave the Democrats a few hints. The party tried, and failed, to wound Turner by telling voters he’d provide one more Republican vote to weaken entitlements. That worked in New York’s 26th district, where Democrat Kathy Hochul tore pages out of the Ryan plan and made her Republican opponent eat them. In the 9th, Turner and his surrogates tried to neutralize the entitlement issue by promising not to cut entitlements. In two robocalls, Koch promised voters that Turner wouldn’t cut Medicare or Social Security. The weekend before the election, Hikind said the same thing, and bolstered his case by saying Democrats were risking the programs. “The president of the United States is now a member of the tea party!” said Hikind. “He said, in his own words, that there won’t be Medicare and Social Security for my children and your children and my grandchildren unless we address Medicare!” That’s not really a wedge issue – it’s the slow death of a wedge issue. It’s the start of a problem for Democrats, who have gone from attacking the Ryan plans for entitlement reform to vouching support for some undefined “everything on the table” entitlement reform. There might not be any way for Democrats to dodge this, and there’s no sign that they want to . And that leaves all of them in the position of Democrats in New York’s 9th. Their traditional base, weary of the recession, not sure what Democrats have to offer any more, are ready to be wedged. “This message will resound for a full year,” said Turner in his victory speech. “It will resound into 2012.” And Digby correctly writes: There are zero reasons to believe they won’t use this — to good effect — against Democrats and the president in 2012. Why would they? It’s working. This is incredible. Republicans and any ghost of Zell “Spitball” Miller that arises with an agenda of their own will have no problem using Medicare and Social Security to their advantage. I’ve loathed that Obama and his advisers have brought up reforming our social safety nets in these troubled times to appease the deficit hawks even if benefit cuts aren’t included. And now it can be used against them. It doesn’t matter how dishonestly it’s done. It’s not too late though. The President has not come forward and uttered the words to America that could unseat not only himself, but many other Democratic politicians in 2012.
Continue reading …Four men trapped underground in the Gleision colliery found dead within a few metres of each other After more than 30 hours of waiting, it was the terrible news the families had dreaded but in their hearts had begun to expect. All four men trapped deep underground in the Gleision colliery high in the Swansea Valley had been found dead. They died, as they worked, close together, discovered within a few metres of each other in the old, cramped mine. Peter Hain, the local MP and shadow Welsh secretary, who had spent hours with the family as they waited, said: “Extraordinary courage was shown by the families right through the night, tortuous hours of waiting. We can’t imagine what they have been through.” He said the tragedy had reawakened old memories. “This has been a stab right through the heart of these local communities. There’s a long tradition of mining here but nobody expected the tragedies of past generations would come today.” Police and safety officials promised to establish how and why the four miners were killed. Forensic teams were at the mine in the village of Cilybebyll beginning to piece together what happened. The four – Charles Breslin, 62, David Powell, 50, Phillip Hill, 45, and Garry Jenkins, 39 – were trapped after water poured into the shaft they were working in on Thursday morning. Three others, including Powell’s son, Daniel, managed to get out and raise the alarm. Families waited for news at a community centre close to the mine. But in the early hours of they were told a body had been found in a flooded shaft. At that point it could not be identified, leaving all four families wondering if it was their loved one. Rescuers managed to pump water from the tunnel and hack through a rockfall, hoping to find the three remaining miners alive. Firefighters with 30 years’ experience said they had never worked in such bad conditions. But at lunchtime a second body was found and by mid afternoon the third was discovered. Rescuers said they had not heard or seen any sign life but continued to search the network of tunnels looking for the fourth miner. His body was discovered at teatime. The attention of the authorities will now focus on finding out what caused the tragedy. Police and the Health and Safety Executive have already launched parallel inquiries. The prime minister, David Cameron, said: “In due course we must ensure we fully understand and learn from the causes of this accident.” Wales Steven Morris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media The one thing you can say about this Cheney family — they’ve got their lies and they’re sticking to them — no matter what. After feeling the need to give the Bush administration some glowing praise for torture, the Patriot Act and Guantanamo Bay, Bill O’Reilly actually challenged the assertion that we were greeted as liberators in Iraq made by Dick Cheney years ago on Meet the Press . Naturally, his daughter Liz, disagreed. O’Reilly pointed to the falling of the statue of Saddam Hussein and that there was only a very small group of people there as evidence that we were not greeted as liberators. What Billo failed to point out to her during this softball interview, is that event was staged by our military as our own Silent Patriot reminded us of back on the 4th anniversary of that event . As to Cheney still repeating the “greeted as liberators” line, John Amato wrote about this back in 2007 when John McCain was carrying water for the Bush administration, repeating that already tired and debunked line back then as well: John McCain told Tim Russert that America was greeted as liberators when we got to Iraq. What is he talking about. When were we ever greeted as liberators? It wasn’t like ten months of peace and tranquility. The looting began almost immediately . He also says that the war was easy. Easy for who? One thing we can count on is that as long as these neocons and supporters of the Iraq invasion are still alive, they’re going to do their best to continue to revise the history books in their favor. Full transcript below the fold. O’REILLY: Ok. The second one is the Iraq war. You know that I’m a supporter or I was a supporter. CHENEY: I actually didn’t know that. O’REILLY: Well, it’s true. I mean I’m on the record of supporting the enhanced interrogations, the Patriot Act, Guantanamo Bay and, you know, consistently across the line. But there’s a historical record and the historical record is that Americans were not aware of the big threat that al Qaeda was posing. CHENEY: The records actually on al Qaeda that before 9/11, we treated it like a law enforcement problem. O’REILLY: Yes. And Clinton did and Bush did. CHENEY: And I think that is the key difference is that the president and the vice president, Bush and Cheney understood after 9/11, this is war. And we’re at war. We have to do whatever it takes to keep the nation safe. O’REILLY: All right. Three days before the Iraq war was launched, here’s what Vice President Cheney said on “Meet the Press”. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) DICK CHENEY, FORMER VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: I think that things have gotten so bad inside Iraq from the standpoint of the Iraqi people. My belief is we will in fact be greeted as liberators. O’REILLY: Ok. Obviously, that didn’t happen. And I would love to know — CHENEY: It actually did happen. We were greeted as liberators and then we saw a massive, bloody, dangerous insurgency began. And it wasn’t frankly until we were able in 2006 with the surge to adopt a counter- insurgency strategy that we were able to frankly turn things around. O’REILLY: Ok. But here’s where you’re wrong. We weren’t greeted as liberators. We were greeted in a way that was tentative. CHENEY: It’s not true. O’REILLY: Yes it is. CHENEY: No, it’s not true. O’REILLY: You saw the statue came down and how many people were out there? Do you know how many people were out there when the statue of Saddam Hussein came down? Do you know how many? CHENEY: Do you know how many Bill? O’REILLY: Yes, I do. A couple of hundred, not thousands; Baghdad is a city of millions. A couple of hundred. CHENEY: Bill — O’REILLY: And then right after the statue came down, the armories were looted and the terrorists went in and they took all of Saddam Hussein’s arms, ok? CHENEY: Look, I know how much — O’REILLY: Because our government wasn’t accepting that. CHENEY: I know how much you care about no spin. O’REILLY: Right. CHENEY: And I think it’s really important here. Saddam was an incredibly repressive dictator — O’REILLY: No doubt. CHENEY: The Iraqi people were glad to see him go. Saddam had in place — there were elements from his regime that stayed in place. There were elements from al Qaeda, elements from Iran who were there who were ready, who launched a very bloody insurgency. O’REILLY: Correct. And it was not anticipated by us. That insurgency — (CROSSTALK) CHENEY: I think it was not anticipated by everyone. I think that’s true. O’REILLY: It was not anticipated. CHENEY: But it’s — when we removed Saddam Hussein, we made sure that there wasn’t going to be somebody in place who we knew had ties to terror, who we knew, knew how to make weapons of mass destruction, who we knew had used them before, who we knew was supporting terrorists. We also, by the way, as soon as Saddam was gone got a phone call from Moammar Gadhafi who didn’t want to be next, who gave up his nuclear weapons. O’REILLY: There were good things that happened. No doubt. CHENEY: I think that the notion that we now have in the heart of the Middle East, a democracy that is not supporting terrorists. It’s not perfect. But it is a huge accomplishment of the Bush Administration that we liberated all those people and the people in Afghanistan. And I think it’s just flat wrong for you to call it that. O’REILLY: Ok. And I disagree in the sense that it could have been done in a different way. I would have — the same result. CHENEY: Which way? Would you have gone and talked to Saddam and said, “Hey, you ought to — O’REILLY: No, I would have gone the Bush the Elder, way, the president’s father and I would have strangled them with a blockade. I would have no-fly zoned it as they would have done and then when the drones were developed — CHENEY: Bill, you have to look at the reports that were done by the Iraq survey group, for example. It was clear when we come came into office in 2000 that Saddam was a threat. He had between the time of the first Bush Administration and this Bush Administration completely ignored 16 U.N. Security Council resolutions — O’REILLY: There’s no doubt about it. CHENEY: — that the sanctions regime was crumbling. So it’s just not accurate to say he was in a box. We could have strangled him. And after 9/11, we couldn’t run the risk — that somebody like Saddam was going to share technology about WMD. O’REILLY: I don’t expect you and your father to agree with me, ok? But the blood and treasure of the United States spent in Iraq has now come back into our country in a very negative way. CHENEY: We need more time and I feel confident that I could convince you of the rightness of my position. O’REILLY: I thank you for coming in Miss Cheney. We appreciate it. CHENEY: Thank you. Good to be here.
Continue reading …London Philharmonic Orchestra punishes cellist and violinists who wanted Proms appearance by Israeli players cancelled The London Philharmonic Orchestra has suspended four musicians for nine months for using its name when they called unsuccessfully for the cancellation of a concert by an Israeli orchestra at the Proms. The move follows the indefinite suspension of an unnamed LPO violinist after she allegedly launched an anti-Israel “rant” when Israeli musicians appeared at the Royal College of Music before the concert at the Royal Albert Hall earlier this month. In a statement, Tim Walker, the LPO’s chief executive, and Martin Hohmann, its chairman, said the suspensions sent “a strong and clear message that their actions will not be tolerated … the orchestra would never restrict the right of its players to express themselves freely, however such expression has to be independent of the LPO itself. “The company has no wish to end the careers of four talented musicians but … for the LPO, music and politics do not mix.” They added that the orchestra had no political or religious affiliations and strongly believed in the power of music to bring peace and harmony to the world, not war, terror and discord. The LPO suspended cellist Sue Sutherley and violinists Tom Eisner, Nancy Elan and Sarah Streatfeild until June 2012 after they signed a letter as members of the LPO denouncing the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra (IPO) as an instrument of the country’s propaganda. It said: “Denials of human rights and violations of international law are hidden behind a cultural smokescreen. The IPO is perhaps Israel’s prime asset in this campaign … Israel’s policy towards the Palestinians fits the UN definition of apartheid.” Other signatories of the letter, which appeared in the Independent newspaper two days before the concert, included: the composer Raymond Deane; violinists Catherine Ford and Roy Mowatt (of the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment); violinist Susie Meszaros (of the Chilingirian Quartet); and 16 other musicians. The IPO’s concert on 1 September was barracked by protesters so noisily that the BBC suspended its live broadcast, although the musicians completed their performance of works by Bruch, Webern, Albeniz and Rimsky-Korsakov, conducted by Zubin Mehta. Sarah Colborne, director of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign , which organised protests against the concert, said: “Would the London Philharmonic Orchestra have punished musicians speaking out against apartheid South Africa, when a similar call for boycott was supported by artists, performers and sports people internationally? “It is staggeringly bad judgment for the LPO to be seen to be attacking musicians who are simply voicing support for human rights and defending the civil right to call for a boycott of institutions which lend strategic support to Israel’s occupation. “If the LPO really wishes not to appear to be taking sides, and supporting an occupying nation against an occupied people, it must end the ridiculous suspension of these four musicians immediately.” Proms 2011 Proms Classical music Festivals Israel Palestinian territories Middle East Human rights Stephen Bates guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Wood-burning plant in Wales to create 700 jobs, but critics say bioenergy drive is based on false belief that it is carbon-neutral The government has given the go-ahead to a huge wood-burning plant which it claims will provide power for a quarter of all Welsh homes, sparking outrage among green campaigners who fear British forests could eventually be lost. Charles Hendry, the energy minister, said the 300MW power station on the coast of Anglesey would provide a “secure, flexible and renewable source of power” while creating hundreds of jobs. The Holyhead biomass facility would help Britain meet its renewable energy targets. But Friends of the Earth argues this is just the first of a huge number of new schemes which could create as many environmental problems as they cure. “If demand rises for wood it could push up prices a lot and potentially this could represent a danger even for British woodland – especially if more of it is privatised,” said Kenneth Richter, biofuels campaigner at Friends of the Earth. His colleague, Gareth Clubb, a director of FoE Cymru, said the project by Anglesey Aluminium Metal Renewables, which will partly be funded by public subsidies under the Renewable Obligation, was “pie in the sky”. The plan to source 200,000 tonnes a year of energy crops from local farms as well as importing more than 2.4m tonnes of wood from abroad was not sustainable, he said. “This is absolute lunacy. One-third of Anglesey, which is used to produce food, would be have to be turned over to biomass crops. Burning wood or crops to make electricity does not make sense anyway because it is very inefficient and it raises the possibility of a worldwide rush to hack down indigenous forest with all the impact of that on biodiversity and ecosystems,” he added. The concerns were expressed as a draft report by a panel of 19 top European scientists, who expressed scepticism about the wider carbon advantages of biomass and biofuels, known collectively as bioenergy. “It is widely assumed that bioenergy is inherently carbon-neutral. However this assumption is flawed,” said the scientific committee of the European Environment Agency in the report seen by Reuters. “The potential consequences of this bioenergy accounting error is enormous.” A second recent report undertaken by the RSPB wildlife group estimated that almost 40 new biomass schemes were in various stages of planning in the UK alone, with an explosion of similar projects expected all over the world. Friends of the Earth and the RSPB want the government to scale down its Renewable Obligation subsidy regime for biomass, saying ministers should concentrate on encouraging wind and solar power. It is not just green groups who oppose the bioenergy drive. The wood timber industry says prices have already shot up by 50% over the past three years as energy companies seek out new supplies for their biomass plants. The industry say timber factories in Britain are now threatened by closure. But the government insists that “there is an urgent need for a diverse mix of new energy infrastructure” in order to maintain energy security and dramatically reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The Holyhead plant would create 600 construction jobs and 100 full-time operating posts. Biomass and bioenergy Energy industry Energy Renewable energy Waste Wales Terry Macalister guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …From The Uptake — Reich Debunks Six Big Lies About The Economy : Is Social Security a Ponzi scheme as Republican Presidential candidate Rick Perry claims? Noted author and former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich debunks that claim and five other lies the right-wing tells about taxes, government and the economy. The lies Reich debunks: 1) Tax cuts to the rich and corporations trickle down to the rest of us. (No it doesn’t and it never has.) 2) If you shrink government you create jobs. (No, you get rid of jobs that way.) 3) High taxes on the rich hurts the economy. (No, the economy grew when the US did this under Eisenhower.) 4) Debt is to be avoided and it is mostly caused by Medicare. (No, if debt is properly used to grow the economy, it becomes a smaller part of the budget because of increased revenue and Medicare has the lowest overhead of any health insurance plan out there.) 5) Social Security is a Ponzi scheme (No, its solid for 26 years. Rick Perry is “lying through his teeth” says Reich. Social Security is solid beyond that if the rich pay the same percentage in social security taxes as the rest of us do.) 6) We need to tax the poor. (This is what Republicans have been proposing when they say any tax reform needs to involve all Americans because poor people pay no income tax. The poor have no money and taxing them will not solve our budget problems.) The worst thing is, because these “facts” from the right-wing are repeated over and over, the media repeats them without challenging them and people accept them as truth. Reich says this is intentional. “The greatest enemy we have is mass cynicism”, said Reich. “When people really get to the point where they think nothing can be done, the other side wins. That’s what they want, by the way. That’s what they want. They want government because it is starved for money, because it is going to be underfunded – all the regulatory agencies – they want government at all levels to function so badly that people say ‘Well government can’t work. I told you.’ And they also want politics to be so bad and so paralyzed that most Americans say ‘Nothing can be done. I’m going to give up on our democracy’.” Reich was speaking at the Summit For A Fair Economy in Minneapolis, Minnesota on September 10, 2011.
Continue reading …Violation of Oslo accord discovered by MP who calls for action to investigate ‘what other breaches are occurring’ at the fair The world’s largest arms fair has thrown out two exhibitors after they were found to be promoting cluster munitions that have been banned by the UK and condemned by more than 100 other countries. The organisers of the London exhibition said they had been unaware that the material was available and an investigation had been launched. But campaigners rounded on the Defence and Security Equipment International fair, saying it was “unbelievable” that more thorough checks had not been undertaken. The action was taken after Caroline Lucas, the Green party leader, discovered that Pakistani arms manufacturers were actively promoting “banned cluster bombs” at their pavilions. Details of the munitions were in brochures readily available to potential customers. A statement from DSEI confirmed that the two stands had been closed on Thursday evening. “(We) can confirm that the Pakistan Ordnance Factory stand and Pakistan’s Defence Export Promotion Organisation pavilion have both been permanently shut down after promotional material was found … containing references to equipment, which after close examination, was found to breach UK government export controls and our own contractual requirements. [The] government fully supports the decision by DSEI to close the stand and the pavilion. We are currently investigating how this breach of our compliance system occurred.” Three years ago, the UK joined other signatories to the Oslo accord, which specifically prohibits “all use, stockpiling, production and transfer” of cluster weapons; they are considered particularly lethal because they are designed to release dozens, sometimes hundreds of “bomblets” on their targets. They have been widely condemned because they have killed and injured hundreds of civilians long after conflicts have ended. One third of all such casualties are thought to have been children. The episode is an embarrassment to the fair, which has had 1,300 firms from more than 40 countries seeking orders for weapons. Earlier this week, the defence secretary Liam Fox gave a speech there, saying that “defence and security exports play a key role in promoting our foreign policy objectives”. Lucas, the MP for Brighton Pavilion, has now written to Vince Cable, the business secretary, saying she remains “deeply concerned” at the level of scrutiny given to the companies who exhibit at DSEI, which has been running all week at the Excel centre in London’s Docklands. “I was able to find illegal advertising materials on the basis of one short visit to the exhibition with few resources at my disposal,” she said. “There’s no telling what other breaches are occurring and might be uncovered with further research.” It should not be left to MPs and campaigners to police illegal promotion of banned arms on British soil. Lucas said there is an “inherent conflict between the government’s promotion of military exports and its stated desire to help protect human rights overseas.” Oliver Sprague, of Amnesty International, said: “It is almost unbelievable. It’s not just cluster bombs, either. Earlier this week we found brochures (on different stands) which appear to show illegal torture equipment being advertised. It is quite amazing that it has taken a Green MP and Amnesty international to find things that are clearly illegal.” Kaye Stearman of the Campaign Against the Arms Trade, condemned the “laxness” that had allowed the companies to promote illegal equipment. “They should never have been allowed in,” she added. A spokesman for DSEI said it had no further comment. The Pakistan Ordnance Factory could not be reached for comment. Earlier this week the Guardian reported that Pakistan was also advertising an “arms for peace” exhibition in Karachi next year as well as “gold-plated” submachine guns, “for collectors”. Arms trade Cluster bombs Pakistan London Nick Hopkins guardian.co.uk
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