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US diplomats told to leave Yemen

US orders all non-essential diplomats to leave and urges all Americans to depart country as security conditions deteriorate The US has ordered all non-essential diplomats to leave Yemen and urged all Americans there to depart as security conditions deteriorate, with the country’s embattled leader refusing to step down. The decision to tell most non-essential personnel and the families of all American staff at the US embassy in Sana’a to leave was a sign of Washington’s increasing concern about the situation in Yemen, where street battles between supporters and opponents of the Yemeni president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, raged for a third day. The clashes have left at least 41 dead and dozens badly injured. “The security threat level in Yemen is extremely high due to terrorist activities and civil unrest,” the US state department said in its advisory. “There is ongoing civil unrest throughout the country and large-scale protests in major cities.” It noted that violent clashes were occurring in Sana’a, the capital, and “may escalate without notice”. The “ordered departure” notice came in a new travel warning for Yemen released as the Obama administration stepped up calls for Saleh to transfer power under an agreement negotiated by neighbouring Gulf states. Speaking in London earlier on Wednesday, the US president, Barack Obama, called on Saleh to “move immediately” to implement the agreement. Saleh has reneged three times on verbal commitments to step down. The earlier US travel alert for Yemen issued in March had allowed non-essential embassy staff and their families to leave at government expense. It had also urged Americans not to go to Yemen but had only told those already in the country to consider leaving. The new alert followed a defiant message from Saleh, who vowed not to step down or allow Yemen to become a “failed state”. His stance, combined with renewed fighting, sharply increased chances that Yemen’s three-month uprising could turn into a militia-led revolt after Arab mediation failed to end Saleh’s 32-year rule. “I will not leave power and I will not leave Yemen,” a spokesman, Ahmed al-Soufi, quoted Saleh as saying. He also took a direct swipe at US-backed efforts to negotiate his exit. “I don’t take orders from outside,” said Saleh’s statement, read by the spokesman in a meeting with tribal allies. “Yemen will not be a failed state. It will not turn into an al-Qaida refuge,” the statement added in another respone to western fears that chaos in Yemen would open the door for an al-Qaida offshoot to expand its operations. The Yemen-based cell, al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, is linked to the attempted Christmas Day 2009 bombing of an airline over Detroit and explosives found in parcels intercepted last year in Dubai and Britain. Despite his tough talk, Saleh’s statement also promised he would try to keep the latest violence from “dragging the country into a civil war.” The clashes began on Monday after Saleh’s troops tried to storm the compound of the head of Yemen’s largest tribe, the Hashid. Hundreds of tribal fighters then responded with fierce attacks on government forces. United States Yemen Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest guardian.co.uk

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US diplomats told to leave Yemen

US orders all non-essential diplomats to leave and urges all Americans to depart country as security conditions deteriorate The US has ordered all non-essential diplomats to leave Yemen and urged all Americans there to depart as security conditions deteriorate, with the country’s embattled leader refusing to step down. The decision to tell most non-essential personnel and the families of all American staff at the US embassy in Sana’a to leave was a sign of Washington’s increasing concern about the situation in Yemen, where street battles between supporters and opponents of the Yemeni president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, raged for a third day. The clashes have left at least 41 dead and dozens badly injured. “The security threat level in Yemen is extremely high due to terrorist activities and civil unrest,” the US state department said in its advisory. “There is ongoing civil unrest throughout the country and large-scale protests in major cities.” It noted that violent clashes were occurring in Sana’a, the capital, and “may escalate without notice”. The “ordered departure” notice came in a new travel warning for Yemen released as the Obama administration stepped up calls for Saleh to transfer power under an agreement negotiated by neighbouring Gulf states. Speaking in London earlier on Wednesday, the US president, Barack Obama, called on Saleh to “move immediately” to implement the agreement. Saleh has reneged three times on verbal commitments to step down. The earlier US travel alert for Yemen issued in March had allowed non-essential embassy staff and their families to leave at government expense. It had also urged Americans not to go to Yemen but had only told those already in the country to consider leaving. The new alert followed a defiant message from Saleh, who vowed not to step down or allow Yemen to become a “failed state”. His stance, combined with renewed fighting, sharply increased chances that Yemen’s three-month uprising could turn into a militia-led revolt after Arab mediation failed to end Saleh’s 32-year rule. “I will not leave power and I will not leave Yemen,” a spokesman, Ahmed al-Soufi, quoted Saleh as saying. He also took a direct swipe at US-backed efforts to negotiate his exit. “I don’t take orders from outside,” said Saleh’s statement, read by the spokesman in a meeting with tribal allies. “Yemen will not be a failed state. It will not turn into an al-Qaida refuge,” the statement added in another respone to western fears that chaos in Yemen would open the door for an al-Qaida offshoot to expand its operations. The Yemen-based cell, al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, is linked to the attempted Christmas Day 2009 bombing of an airline over Detroit and explosives found in parcels intercepted last year in Dubai and Britain. Despite his tough talk, Saleh’s statement also promised he would try to keep the latest violence from “dragging the country into a civil war.” The clashes began on Monday after Saleh’s troops tried to storm the compound of the head of Yemen’s largest tribe, the Hashid. Hundreds of tribal fighters then responded with fierce attacks on government forces. United States Yemen Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest guardian.co.uk

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Humiliated Ed Schultz: ‘Laura Ingraham, I Am Sorry, Very Sorry’ for ‘Vile Language;’ Concedes He’s ‘Embarrassed’ MSNBC

In full retreat, a humiliated and somber Ed Schultz opened his MSNBC show on Wednesday night by apologizing to Laura Ingraham for using, on his radio show, “vile and inappropriate language” to describe her, language he did not repeat. On Tuesday, the left-wing host had slimed the conservative talk radio host as a “right-wing slut” and a “radio slut.” (After Schultz’s statement, Thomas Roberts hosted the rest of the hour.) Schultz pleaded: “I am deeply sorry, and I apologize. It was wrong, uncalled for and I recognize the severity of what I said. I apologize to you, Laura, and ask for your forgiveness.” He added that “I also met with management here at MSNBC, and understanding the severity of the situation and what I said on the radio and how it reflected terribly on this company, I have offered to take myself off the air for an indefinite period of time with no pay.” The official NBC management statement, however, said he had agreed to “one week of unpaid leave.”

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Humiliated Ed Schultz: ‘Laura Ingraham, I Am Sorry, Very Sorry’ for ‘Vile Language;’ Concedes He’s ‘Embarrassed’ MSNBC

In full retreat, a humiliated and somber Ed Schultz opened his MSNBC show on Wednesday night by apologizing to Laura Ingraham for using, on his radio show, “vile and inappropriate language” to describe her, language he did not repeat. On Tuesday, the left-wing host had slimed the conservative talk radio host as a “right-wing slut” and a “radio slut.” (After Schultz’s statement, Thomas Roberts hosted the rest of the hour.) Schultz pleaded: “I am deeply sorry, and I apologize. It was wrong, uncalled for and I recognize the severity of what I said. I apologize to you, Laura, and ask for your forgiveness.” He added that “I also met with management here at MSNBC, and understanding the severity of the situation and what I said on the radio and how it reflected terribly on this company, I have offered to take myself off the air for an indefinite period of time with no pay.” The official NBC management statement, however, said he had agreed to “one week of unpaid leave.”

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Dominique Strauss-Kahn moves to townhouse in New York

The former head of the International Monetary Fund has moved to a town house in Tribeca where he will remain under house arrest Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the former International Monetary Fund leader, has moved from a temporary apartment to a luxurious townhouse where he will remain under house arrest as he awaits trial in his attempted rape case, officials said. The one-time French presidential contender was seen as he got into a gray sport utility vehicle under tight security. He was moved about a mile (1.6 kilometres) away from New York’s financial district to the stately red brick townhouse in Tribeca, according a person familiar with his housing arrangements. The building is close to the courthouse where he will attend hearings. Attorney William Taylor told reporters on Wednesday that his client was “doing fine” under house arrest. “Not much he can do,” Taylor said. Strauss-Kahn is free on $1 million bail under strict house arrest after prosecutors feared him a flight risk given his international status and wealth. He spent about a week in jail on Rikers Island after he was arrested on 14 May following accusations that he sexually assaulted a hotel maid in his room at the Sofitel near Manhattan’s Times Square. His lawyers maintain Strauss-Kahn is not guilty. Bail plans hit a snag late last week when tenants at the Upper East Side apartment building initially secured for his house arrest refused to accept him because of unwanted media attention. He was briefly housed at a high-rise near Wall Street, where a throng of media has been camped out at the building, broadcasting as his wife, former journalist Anne Sinclair, entered and left the building. Strauss-Kahn, who has no prior criminal record, is monitored by armed guards and wears an electronic bracelet, and his movements are recorded on camera. He will be allowed out for court, doctor’s visits and religious services. Prosecutors must be notified at least six hours before he goes anywhere, and he can’t be out between 10pm and 6am. Under his terms of house arrest, he can receive up to four visitors at a time besides family. The agreement is expected to cost him about $200,000 a month. The town house includes a state-of-the-art theatre, gym, spa and four bathrooms. Strauss-Kahn was pulled from a jetliner bound for Paris after the 32-year-old woman reported the alleged encounter to hotel staff. He resigned nearly a week ago from the IMF, saying in his resignation he said he wanted to protect the institution. “To all, I want to say that I deny with the greatest possible firmness all of the allegations that have been made against me,” he said. Dominique Strauss-Kahn United States France Europe IMF New York guardian.co.uk

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**The Right: Very Respectful Of Human Rights Yesterday, I pulled up to a drive-through ATM, and sitting in front of me in the line was a car with a license plate that simply stated, “Choose Life”. Who can argue with that? I support life, don’t you? The problem, of course, is the relationship between that phrase and the US right wing. You know, the ones who are petrified of everything from black presidents to black helicopters to Black Sabbath. Yes, they piously claim to be “pro-life”, but it is a simple platitude, for – to paraphrase Inigo Montoya from The Princess Bride – I do not think that word means what they think it means. To those not steeped in US politics, being pro-life might seem like it means what one would expect – to oppose policies and endeavours that duly result in a loss of human life. But, in the US political arena, it means something quite different. Generally, it is a way of telling everyone that it’s your business to give a woman her marching orders – that she must eventually carry a three-day-old embryo to term, even if it’s the result of rape or incest. Or its corollary, that you’re some kind of Nietzschean Superman for ensuring that 91-year-old patients in terrible pain due to pancreatic cancer must stick a tube in any empty orifice to force themselves to stay alive and suffer, even against their own wishes. The sad reality is that, to be pro-life in the US today, which is to be conservative in almost all cases, is to love thy enemy by supporting illegal wars – or just plain stupid ones – that kill hundreds of thousands of innocents, cutting health-care benefits and nutrition programs for children and the poor, and turning the other cheek … of the person you’re torturing . It is also to cut funding for bridges that are falling down to make room for slashing the tax on yacht shoes, make a best faith effort to ensure criminals, the mentally unbalanced and terrorists have access to assault weapons and explosives , and to love thy neighbour – to love them so much as to give him or her a lethal injection if you think they killed someone. “Think” is the operative word here, as it seems the conservative Governor of Ohio, John Kasich, may be about to put an innocent man to death . Shawn Hawkins, the man in question, is to be executed on June 14, 2011. This, even though there are serious enough concerns he may be innocent that on May 11, the Ohio Parole Board unanimously recommended that the governor grant him clemency due to increasing doubt over his guilt. But hell, what’s a little faulty eyewitness testimony, evidence destroyed before it could be DNA tested, and lack of placing the defendant in possession of the murder weapon between friends? So, in other words, the morning-after pill is murder, but taking a human being who very likely might be innocent – and killing him – that is just so pro-life! The truth is that those on the US right are about as “pro-life” as Arnold Schwarzenegger is pro-wife. Or Dominique Strauss Kahn is pro-maid. It is an empty phrase they throw around to attract a core demographic of foaming mouths, those who hate the very idea of a woman choosing to have sex and having any control over her body . Because presumably, Jesus, who talked about love and brotherhood, would have taken the time to stop walking on water and curing the infirm to rabbit punch any woman contemplating a life of self-determination. This is not to say there are not legitimate concerns with late-term abortions. I have these concerns. Or underage girls making this decision without adult guidance. I have those ones too. But this is not what this particular battle’s about. Because if it were, I probably wouldn’t have once argued on a television show with a conservative, who in one sentence told me that abortion was murder, and in the next that we should eliminate the Environmental Protection Agency (the guys who, you know, make sure we can breathe) – and turn Iraq into a “glass factory” (See: sand and extreme heat). Now maybe you’re reading this and asking: “I already know all of this, why is he wasting my time?” Well, perhaps this is just my way of saying I’m tired of the platitudes, particularly on the licence plates of portly, pale, Rush Limbaugh-imbibers who take way-too-much time at the drive-through ATM because they’re still working their way through fractions. You can pick whatever political slogan you want. But pro-life is pro-life in any language. And you’re probably a bit closer to actually being pro-life if you care about how a pregnant woman will get health care, and aren’t the guy trying to cut it, while wearing your wife-beater t-shirt and holding up the Obama sign with the Hitler moustache. Follow Me On Twitter? Why Sure! A slightly different version of this column first appeared at Al Jazeera English

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**The Right: Very Respectful Of Human Rights Yesterday, I pulled up to a drive-through ATM, and sitting in front of me in the line was a car with a license plate that simply stated, “Choose Life”. Who can argue with that? I support life, don’t you? The problem, of course, is the relationship between that phrase and the US right wing. You know, the ones who are petrified of everything from black presidents to black helicopters to Black Sabbath. Yes, they piously claim to be “pro-life”, but it is a simple platitude, for – to paraphrase Inigo Montoya from The Princess Bride – I do not think that word means what they think it means. To those not steeped in US politics, being pro-life might seem like it means what one would expect – to oppose policies and endeavours that duly result in a loss of human life. But, in the US political arena, it means something quite different. Generally, it is a way of telling everyone that it’s your business to give a woman her marching orders – that she must eventually carry a three-day-old embryo to term, even if it’s the result of rape or incest. Or its corollary, that you’re some kind of Nietzschean Superman for ensuring that 91-year-old patients in terrible pain due to pancreatic cancer must stick a tube in any empty orifice to force themselves to stay alive and suffer, even against their own wishes. The sad reality is that, to be pro-life in the US today, which is to be conservative in almost all cases, is to love thy enemy by supporting illegal wars – or just plain stupid ones – that kill hundreds of thousands of innocents, cutting health-care benefits and nutrition programs for children and the poor, and turning the other cheek … of the person you’re torturing . It is also to cut funding for bridges that are falling down to make room for slashing the tax on yacht shoes, make a best faith effort to ensure criminals, the mentally unbalanced and terrorists have access to assault weapons and explosives , and to love thy neighbour – to love them so much as to give him or her a lethal injection if you think they killed someone. “Think” is the operative word here, as it seems the conservative Governor of Ohio, John Kasich, may be about to put an innocent man to death . Shawn Hawkins, the man in question, is to be executed on June 14, 2011. This, even though there are serious enough concerns he may be innocent that on May 11, the Ohio Parole Board unanimously recommended that the governor grant him clemency due to increasing doubt over his guilt. But hell, what’s a little faulty eyewitness testimony, evidence destroyed before it could be DNA tested, and lack of placing the defendant in possession of the murder weapon between friends? So, in other words, the morning-after pill is murder, but taking a human being who very likely might be innocent – and killing him – that is just so pro-life! The truth is that those on the US right are about as “pro-life” as Arnold Schwarzenegger is pro-wife. Or Dominique Strauss Kahn is pro-maid. It is an empty phrase they throw around to attract a core demographic of foaming mouths, those who hate the very idea of a woman choosing to have sex and having any control over her body . Because presumably, Jesus, who talked about love and brotherhood, would have taken the time to stop walking on water and curing the infirm to rabbit punch any woman contemplating a life of self-determination. This is not to say there are not legitimate concerns with late-term abortions. I have these concerns. Or underage girls making this decision without adult guidance. I have those ones too. But this is not what this particular battle’s about. Because if it were, I probably wouldn’t have once argued on a television show with a conservative, who in one sentence told me that abortion was murder, and in the next that we should eliminate the Environmental Protection Agency (the guys who, you know, make sure we can breathe) – and turn Iraq into a “glass factory” (See: sand and extreme heat). Now maybe you’re reading this and asking: “I already know all of this, why is he wasting my time?” Well, perhaps this is just my way of saying I’m tired of the platitudes, particularly on the licence plates of portly, pale, Rush Limbaugh-imbibers who take way-too-much time at the drive-through ATM because they’re still working their way through fractions. You can pick whatever political slogan you want. But pro-life is pro-life in any language. And you’re probably a bit closer to actually being pro-life if you care about how a pregnant woman will get health care, and aren’t the guy trying to cut it, while wearing your wife-beater t-shirt and holding up the Obama sign with the Hitler moustache. Follow Me On Twitter? Why Sure! A slightly different version of this column first appeared at Al Jazeera English

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NHS failing in basic care of some elderly patients, warns watchdog

Care Quality Commission says some NHS trusts do not provide dignity and nutrition for some senior citizen patients The NHS regulator today criticises the service for failing some elderly patients by giving them what the health secretary, Andrew Lansley, called “appalling levels of care” in hospital. Inspection reports compiled by the Care Quality Commission (CQC) take the health service to task for not respecting the privacy of some senior citizens receiving treatment or ensuring they eat properly. The reports reveal that three out of 12 hospitals in England where standards of dignity and nutrition for older patients were assessed in spot checks were not meeting the basic standards which they are legally obliged to deliver. The three trusts were Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS trust, the Ipswich Hospital NHS trust and the Royal Free Hampstead NHS trust in north London. CQC inspectors had less serious concerns about three other trusts, but found the other six were performing as they should. “While the reports document many examples of people being treated with respect and given personalised, attentive care, some tell a bleak story of people not being helped to eat and drink, with their care needs not assessed and their dignity not respected”, said the NHS watchdog for England. It found examples of: • Patients not being helped to eat meals, which meant some consumed no food. • Staff not assessing or monitoring patients’ nutritional needs, for example by not conducting regular checks of their weight or not identifying those who were malnourished. • People having too little to drink because fluids were left out of their reach or they received no fluids for a long time. One clinician had to prescribe water to a patient to ensure they got enough to drink. • Staff not treating patients respectfully, and patients being talked to in a condescending or dismissive way. • Staff not involving patients in their own care, for instance by not explaining treatment to them in advance or not seeking their consent. The CQC’s findings come after the Patients Association exposed appalling care received by some older patients and the charity Age UK’s Hungry to be Heard campaign, which revealed major weaknesses in NHS feeding practices, such as elderly patients becoming or remaining malnourished while in hospital. At the Royal Free Hospital, for example, inspectors found that staff did not always respond to patients pressing their bells – on one occasion when the person was at risk of falling our of bed – and heard complaints from patients that they were rarely asked if they had enough to drink. “The inspection teams have seen some exemplary care, but some hospitals are not even getting the basics right. That is unacceptable,” said Lansley. The NHS Confederation, which represents hospitals, said the failings identified by the CQC were “simply unacceptable”. “We in the NHS cannot tolerate the failure to meet minimum standards in any way, shape or form,” said Sir Keith Pearson, its chairman. Staff do not always honour the pledge on compassion in the NHS Constitution to “respond with humanity and kindness to each person’s pain, distress, anxiety or need”, he added. Dr Peter Carter, general secretary of the Royal College of Nursing, said: “Some of the concerns raised in this report are truly shocking and we are clear that there is simply no excuse for failing to treat patients with the respect and dignity they deserve.” All staff should be able to meet every patient’s and their family’s physical, social and emotional needs, he added. But Carter also warned that with ongoing job losses across the NHS, pressure on nurses’ time and too few staff to ensure patient safety, “frontline care is inevitably going to be affected.” “It is extremely worrying that a quarter of the first 12 hospitals to be spot-checked were non-compliant in both areas”, said Michelle Mitchell of Age UK. “It is also wholly unacceptable that some of the anecdotal evidence in the reports reveal distressing stories of medical staff having to prescribe water to ensure patients are hydrated and of some patients receiving treatment with little or no communication as to what is happening and why.” Although hospital staff recognise the importance of such care, more needs to be done to translate their words into action on wards, she added. Katherine Murphy, director of the Patients Association, called for the introduction of independent matrons – not employed by the NHS organisations where they worked – who could lobby on behalf of patients for changes to be made if they came across examples of sub-standard care. NHS Health Older people Health policy Public services policy Denis Campbell guardian.co.uk

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The many rewards of bigotry: Why right-wing ‘libertarianism’ on race is a lie — and a cover

Click here to view this media We’ve all heard any number of right-wing “libertarians” who cling to the fantasy that the magic of the marketplace would eventually magically erase racial discrimination as a business practice, if only we would let it work. That’s why you’ll hear Ron Paul ardently contend that the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was bad law, since it forced private business owners to cease discriminating on the basis of race. It’s how a guy like John Stossel can argue with a straight face that if there hadn’t been any government loans at all, black farmers wouldn’t have been discriminated against. Of course, what really happens when modern business owners engage in open displays of bigotry is a very different dynamic: First, they attract attention to their previously anonymous business. When news gets around, they are interviewed by right-wing talk-show hosts and their story featured by all varieties of right-wing apologists, employing a variety of shopworn rationales (i.e., they are pals with all kinds of minorities, it’s not intended to discourage minorities, it’s just a straight business practice, blah blah blah). — Then their business gets a huge boost from white customers who flock to the place in support as a kind of racial political statement. Eventually they get an appearance on Fox News and perhaps CNN and become mini-national celebrities, and their businesses prosper even more wildly. You can see that dynamic at work in the case of the Reedy Creek Family Diner in Lexington, N.C., where the owner — frustrated by some failed and angry interactions with Latino customers who spoke no English — post a sign declaring: “No Speak English, No Service”. Sure enough, soon its owner — an amiable-seeming fellow named Greg Simons — was being interviewed by Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck, and putting the sign back up after initially taking it down . Then writers like Esther Cepeda chimed in, describing it all as just a misunderstanding: He says he never meant to imply that people who don’t speak English fluently are not welcome in his restaurant or that such diners would be denied service if some other language was spoken at the table. He just wanted patrons to know that his staff is monolingual. Simons’ story is that a few weeks ago, on separate occasions, two different groups of Spanish-only speakers came into his Southern comfort food restaurant. Despite his best efforts at pointing and miming, he could not take their order. In both cases, the frustrated diners left in a torrent of Spanish-language cussing, which Simons recognized as a snub because, as the great-grandson of French Canadian and Swedish immigrants, he knows “enough French and Spanish to know when I’m being insulted.” That’s when Simons put up the sign. First, ironically, just in English and then in the five other languages, so as to not single out any particular ethnic group in a state that has seen its Latino population explode by 111 percent in the last decade to total 8.4 percent. Once the media firestorm began, Simons, who describes himself as a multiculturally aware guy who dates women of other races and maintains friendships with Latinos and other minorities, says he got a handful of nasty calls, including a bomb threat. He was then humbled by an outpouring of support from people who were angered that anyone would be labeled a racist for demanding communication in English. I’m sorry, but a sign declaring “No Speak English, No Service” is a sign declaring non-English speakers unwelcome in any language — and no amount of mealy-mouthed weasel words can alter that fact. Nor can a handful of the most stereotypically vapid excuses — “Some of my best friends are Latinos”. But notice how the libertarian “post racial” fantasy doesn’t exactly work out? Instead of this business owner being shamed and suffering a loss of business, the right-wing need to declare that liberals are “waving the bloody shirt” any time they attempt to hold people responsible for their bigoted speech actually ensures that these people not only won’t be hurt, they will prosper tremendously for it. (Tim Wise has another example of this. ) Moreover, such is the state of modern conservatism that it thoroughly embraces these libertarian “post-racial” fantasies about how all would be swell if we just let capitalism work its magic, now that everyone knows that ethnic, religious and sexual bigotry are bad things — even in the face of overwhelming factual evidence, both historical and current, that just the opposite is true: Bigotry can be very a lucrative way of doing business. It can also be a very powerful political strategy when tendered with dog whistles and subtle racial appeals — particularly to white Americans’ fears that they are being racially overwhelmed. An anonymous member of Congress who writes for Huffington Post under the nom de plume “Anonymous Radicalized Marginal Democratic House Member” expressed this vividly the other day when explaining why Democrats have been so impotent when it comes to moving any kind of immigration legislation forward: “Easy: because desperate Republicans two years ago had to swap dog whistles for bull horns to reach their virulent nativist base voters, and now nativism has become a litmus test for Republicans. “Anti-immigrant groups were building blocks of the Tea Party. Tea Party Republicans foam at the mouth when they have to press one for English.They want to arrest and deport anyone buying Tecate beer with cash at WalMart. It’s the culture, stupid.” Indeed, just the other day, Science Daily reported on a study finding that whites now believe they are the victims of racism more than blacks! Whites believe that they have replaced blacks as the primary victims of racial discrimination in contemporary America, according to a new study from researchers at Tufts University’s School of Arts and Sciences and Harvard Business School. The findings, say the authors, show that America has not achieved the “post-racial” society that some predicted in the wake of Barack Obama’s election. Both whites and blacks agree that anti-black racism has decreased over the last 60 years, according to the study. However, whites believe that anti-white racism has increased and is now a bigger problem than anti-black racism. “It’s a pretty surprising finding when you think of the wide range of disparities that still exist in society, most of which show black Americans with worse outcomes than whites in areas such as income, home ownership, health and employment,” said Tufts Associate Professor of Psychology Samuel Sommers, Ph.D., co-author of “Whites See Racism as a Zero-sum Game that They Are Now Losing,” which appears in the May 2011 issue of the journal Perspectives on Psychological Science. Sommers and co-author Michael I. Norton of Harvard asked a nation-wide sample of 208 blacks and 209 whites to indicate the extent to which they felt blacks and whites were the targets of discrimination in each decade from the 1950s to the 2000s. A scale of 1 to 10 was used, with 1 being “not at all” and 10 being “very much.” White and black estimates of bias in the 1950s were similar. Both groups acknowledged little racism against whites at that time but substantial racism against blacks. Respondents also generally agreed that racism against blacks has decreased over time, although whites believed it has declined faster than blacks do. However, whites believed that racism against whites has increased significantly as racism against blacks has decreased. On average, whites rated anti-white bias as more prevalent in the 2000s than anti-black bias by more than a full point on the 10-point scale. Moreover, some 11 percent of whites gave anti-white bias the maximum rating of 10 compared to only 2 percent of whites who rated anti-black bias a 10. Blacks, however, reported only a modest increase in their perceptions of “reverse racism.” “These data are the first to demonstrate that not only do whites think more progress has been made toward equality than do blacks, but whites also now believe that this progress is linked to a new inequality — at their expense,” note Norton and Sommers. Whites see racial equality as a zero sum game, in which gains for one group mean losses for the other. You can read the entire study here. [PDF] This is part of a mindset that has been cultivated by — indeed, it seems endemic to — conservatives: namely, that race is a zero-sum game. It was expressed perhaps most succinctly by Republican Sen. Jeff Sessions when he was accusing Sonia Sotomayor of being prejudiced (with nary a whiff of irony): Call it empathy, call it prejudice, or call it sympathy, but whatever it is, it’s not law. In truth it’s more akin to politics, and politics has no place in the courtroom. … That is, of course, the logical flaw in the empathy standard. Empathy for one party is always prejudice against another. As long as one of our major political parties is the host and breeding ground of this kind of worldview, there’s going to be a racial divide in this country. And liberals who want to grasp onto the starry-eyed fantasies of “post racial” politics had better figure that out too.

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Sure, it’s political theater — but it’s smart political theater : In what amounted to political theater rather than legislative action, the Senate on Wednesday rejected a House budget plan that included a controversial provision to overhaul Medicare and also unanimously voted down President Barack Obama’s 2012 budget proposal. The House budget measure had been expected to fail in the Senate due to overwhelming opposition by majority Democrats, plus wavering support for its Medicare overhaul among Republicans. The Senate GOP has recognized the provision’s unpopularity with senior citizens enrolled in the government-run health insurance program. Senate Democrats forced Wednesday’s vote in order to make Senate Republicans go on record in support of the Medicare overhaul. The final vote on the proposal originated by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wisconsin, was 57-40, mostly along party lines. Republicans who joined the majority Democrats in opposing the measure were Scott Brown of Massachusetts, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Rand Paul of Kentucky, and Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins of Maine. Scott Brown was whining : The Massachusetts Republican had announced Monday that he would oppose the GOP plan after previously saying he would vote for it. After taking the vote, Brown immediately faulted Majority Leader Harry Reid for “playing divisive political games with our nation’s financial future.” Brown said the Nevada Democrat should instead allow senators to work on “a bipartisan budget that is fiscally responsible and can pass the Senate.”

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