As Lachlan noted earlier, NPR CEO Vivian Schiller claimed at the National Press Club that NPR isn't a left-wing sandbox. But the transparent fakery of this became even more transparent when
Continue reading …enlarge Operation Desert Storm – all over except the shouting. Click here to view this media On this day in 1991 the first combat troops were returning from Operation Desert Storm with more on the way. Meanwhile, uprisings around Iraq were being quickly extinguished by the Saddam Hussein regime. President Bush delivers an address the previous night to declare the war was over with reactions from Capitol Hill. In Los Angeles, viral video tape of a beating by police of motorist Rodney King in the Lakeview Terrace section of Los Angeles sparked controversy and a clumsy attempt at explanation on the parts of the LAPD. An investigation was promised. And that’s what it looked today if you were in 1991.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media This exchange is odious. I thought Glenn Beck was bad — bad enough that he may be in danger of getting booted from Fox News — but in 40 seconds or so, hater-spook Michael Scheuer just laid down some of the most disgusting commentary I’ve ever heard. (Scheuer, in case you’ve forgotten, wished for another terrorist attack on the USA so we’d “learn”) Let’s start with reality, then I’ll give you the transcript. Reality in Libya is that entire cities are being wiped off the map as Moammar Gadhafi cracks down on freedom fighters. Reality in Libya is that Gadhafi is a dictator in decline but he has no regard for his people and has no problem killing those who seek his exile and/or death. Reality in Libya is that Gadhafi is brutal, insane, and responsible for more acts of terrorism in the past three weeks than any other country in the last 30 years. This is before we get to the question of the Lockerbie crash and Gadhafi’s hand in that. This is who the man is. And the US response to his mayhem has been remarkably measured. Via The Hill : Obama, in remarks with visiting Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, said he wanted “to send a very clear message” to those around Moammar Gadhafi. “It is their choice to make how they operate moving forward, and they will be held accountable for whatever violence continues to take place there,” Obama said. The president’s tough words come as Obama and his administration cautiously weigh further steps, including military action, in the country. Obama on Monday greenlighted an additional $15 million in emergency funds for humanitarian assistance, and the North Atlantic Council of NATO — meeting daily this week — is still considering other military options. Obama has made it clear he will not pursue military intervention unilaterally. We’ve sent humanitarian aid. We’re a member of NATO. Libya’s unrest threatens the UK and other key allies. And Gadhafi is indulging his thirst for genocide. Now this is what CIA counterterrorism expert and professional hater Scheurer says is the motive for ‘considering military options’: NAPOLITANO: How much of a threat is Moammar Gadhafi to the United States of America at the present time? SCHEUER: Zero, sir. NAPOLITANO: Then what would be the basis — moral, political, economic — for the American president to threaten military action against him? SCHEUER: Arrogance and racism is the answer. Every time Obama opens his mouth he sounds like a combination of Kipling and Woodrow Wilson. He’s gonna teach our little brown brothers how to vote and how to elect people. He’s really a tragedy for America, he’s gonna get more of our kids killed in wars that we can’t get out of once we start. I can’t remember the last time I heard something so unAmerican and downright hateful spoken as though it were fact. As though it were FACT! Arrogance and racism? Really? Wow, who is this guy and who publishes his books? And why should we trust ANYONE who was a career spook? Fox is pretty cagy about how they present things, and Scheuer is happy to accomodate. On the one hand, he gets to call the President uppity and racist while on the other, singing the anti-war songs. Hey. The guy is ex-CIA. Is there really any reason to accord him any credibility whatsoever? When you’ve spent 20 years manipulating people, a Fox appearance is just a brush-up of the chops, not serious commentary. Who exactly is the racist here? I think it’s not the President.
Continue reading …The anti-abortion movement is so thoroughly dishonest, and so lacking in moral power, they have to pretend that funding birth control and women’s health care is the exact same thing as abortion — or, as they want us to think from watching this stupid ad, churning a bunny in a blender. What a bunch of dopes. Via Raw Story: A new video from an anti-abortion group begins with this tagline: “Imagine the government giving hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars every year to a company that does this.” A nurse then plops a cute bunny into a blender, and the screen fades to black as the blender ostensibly churns the bunny up. This sensational video is from the American Life League, an anti-abortion advocacy group that’s taken aim on government funding for Planned Parenthood, via the Title X program. What do cute bunnies have to do with Title X, a 40-year-old family planning program created by Republicans, which ensures that low-income women have access to family planning and health care? While some conservative bloggers have predicted this video will “make pro-abortionists see red,” this bizarre scenario has left some pro-choice activists more confused. Title X does not only fund Planned Parenthood but also public health centers across the country to allow low-income women access to breast exams, Pap tests, STI checks, and birth control. As a result, Title X actually prevents the need for women to have abortions. If Title X has nothing to do with abortion, except that it provides care to prevent abortions, it is unclear why the Tea Party and the American Life League would oppose it. Amie Newman, a reproductive rights advocate and contributor to RH Reality Check, told Raw Story what she thinks the American Life League was trying to accomplish with their video: “All they needed was a blender and a bunny, and they’ve created a lie and a smokescreen,” she said. “They’re not fighting against an evil abortion empire. They’re looking to do away with a necessary, compassionate safety net program which helps pay for health care for millions of Americans because they do not believe that any women in this country should be allowed to use birth control or access annual exams, Pap tests and STI checks with taxpayer funding.” “They should just be honest about it,” she concluded.
Continue reading …Leave it to Chris Matthews to look at a typical, by the book, recitation of talking points, appearance by Republican Congresswoman Michele Bachmann and describe it as a sign of conspiracy or lunacy. On Monday's Hardball, after Matthews played clips of Bachmann on Meet the Press, he wondered if she was trained by “a group in Virginia that teaches right wing people” to “use the most wild language” and repeat it or was she simply “behaving like a zombie?” Matthews, who is prone to make cinematic comparisons, went on to say the conservative congresswoman's appearance reminded him of The Manchurian Candidate as he questioned Democratic Representative Loretta Sanchez : “Is there some kind of playing card…A queen of diamonds, like in The Manchurian Candidate, where you flash the queen of diamonds and this congresswoman colleague of yours goes into that trance like repetition of those words?” The following Matthews outbursts were aired on the March 7 Hardball: CHRIS MATTHEWS: Congresswoman Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, she's head of the Tea Party caucus formally. She went on Meet the Press yesterday, in this building, and defended calling the Obama administration a “gangster government.” That was her word, gangster. Is she speaking for the whole Tea Party or her party or right wingers or who? … MATTHEWS: You know I don't know whether this hyperbole like you sometimes get from the Middle East these days, or have always gotten from over there or the way people talk now. You can disagree and say “He's further left than I am,” you can say, “He's bigger on government than I am,” but what does it mean? Here she is defending her term here. Gangster! Like he's a criminal. He's running a criminal operation. What is she talking like this for and to whom? Let's listen. (Clip of David Gregory interviewing Bachmann on March 6 Meet the Press) MATTHEWS REPEATING BACHMANN CHARGE: Corrupt. Congresswoman Loretta Sanchez, this is a corrupt administration. I don't know where the indictments are? If it's corrupt let's see the indictments, let's move. If there's something criminal, let's hear about it. Throwing words around like gangster, what is she up to? Is this what appeals to people who simply want to hear bad things said about President Obama? Is that what it is? Any bad word is good enough for them? MATTHEWS: Well let me bring Jonathan [Capehart] on here. Jonathan, You're a very smart guy and I think you know the Washington scene as well as I do. Or at least you're learning it — and I mean it — as a younger guy. And I gotta tell you something there's a group over in Virginia that teaches right wing people how to talk like this. Use the most wild language and always repeat over and over again and ignore the question. David Gregory was doing a masterful job of trying to get her to answer a question. She wasn't answering it. Here, here is the montage. He asked all kinds of questions and got the – I've accused her of behaving like a zombie, in the sense that you always just stay on this sort of hypnotic trance no matter what the question is. You come on television not to answer questions, not to engage in a dialogue but to speak this sort of rehearsed thing. Now here is David Gregory repeatedly yesterday asking Congresswoman Bachmann about the possibility of a government shutdown – a good question. Whether she, herself, would vote to shut down the government – a good question – over the fight over Planned Parenthood] and the EPA – equally good policy questions. And whether Speaker Boehner has failed the Tea Party people, who want more action taken [on] budget cutting. The Congresswoman was determined to drive home one
Continue reading …So it seems Charles Koch wrote an editorial while I was away. An editorial for the Rupert Murdoch-owned Wall Street Journal, where he spends an entire column saying a whole lot of nothing. An editorial where he misstates facts, figures, and twists up truth into his weird alternate reality. I feel compelled to respond to him. Dear Charles Koch, In your March 1st editorial, you make the following statements: Years of tremendous overspending by federal, state and local governments have brought us face-to-face with an economic crisis. Federal spending will total at least $3.8 trillion this year—double what it was 10 years ago. And unlike in 2001, when there was a small federal surplus, this year’s projected budget deficit is more than $1.6 trillion. This is a direct consequence of the costs of two wars which until 2008, were not added to the balance sheets. Funny how you fail to account for where the deficits arose, but are quick to point to their existence. Several trillions more in debt have been accumulated by state and local governments. States are looking at a combined total of more than $130 billion in budget shortfalls this year. Next year, they will be in even worse shape as most so-called stimulus payments end. Ironic that you would give any credit to the stimulus for helping states, given the enormous funds you’ve laid out to criticize any lawmaker who supported it. What hypocrisy is this? State and local governments are looking at shortfalls because tax revenues have not kept pace with expenditures. This is not the fault of individuals living in those states or municipalities. It is the direct effect of the failure of corporations to pay their fair share to do business in states, and the failure of those same corporations to employ workers in those states, causing those workers to rely upon governmental safety nets to get them by while their jobs are outsourced to countries where corporate profits can increase. For many years, I, my family and our company have contributed to a variety of intellectual and political causes working to solve these problems. Because of our activism, we’ve been vilified by various groups. Despite this criticism, we’re determined to keep contributing and standing up for those politicians, like Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, who are taking these challenges seriously. Let’s talk about your “activism”, because it goes far beyond just political philosophy. You fund groups who actively seek to promote lies about the current President’s place of birth, his legitimacy as a United States citizen, and undermine the mandate he received from voters in 2008. That’s not “standing up” for anything. Spending tens of millions — even hundreds of millions — to oppose climate change legislation isn’t “activism”. It’s serving your own financial self-interests. That’s not surprising, nor is it illegal, but it’s certainly not as noble and high minded as “solving these problems.” Here are some problems your tens or hundreds of millions could be solving: Preventing medical bankruptcy , which is still on the rise and will not end until all Americans have access to reasonably-priced health insurance BEFORE they get sick or fired. Preventing the consequences of climate change instead of denying it exists. Investing creatively in our future through green industry, high speed rail, and other projects which build up this country instead of tearing it down. Instead, you deny climate change, pay millions to lobby for the defeat of climate change legislation , buy politicians who must do your bidding and vote to de-fund the Affordable Care Act (and any other good and decent thing government does). You call this ‘activism’. I call it destruction. Federal data indicate how urgently we need reform: The unfunded liabilities of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid already exceed $106 trillion. That’s well over $300,000 for every man, woman and child in America (and exceeds the combined value of every U.S. bank account, stock certificate, building and piece of personal or public property). Again, you fail to note the cost of conducting two wars. If you were honest, you’d be paying your teabagging minions to be out protesting the war instead of gay marriage. But you’re not honest, not even a little bit honest. In fact, I doubt there’s anything honest in this entire editorial of yours at all, other than the words you DIDN’T say: You don’t give a damn whether the government goes under at all. You’d like it to go under, because in your world, corporations are king. No, you say? I say yes, and you confirm it right here: Government spending on business only aggravates the problem. Too many businesses have successfully lobbied for special favors and treatment by seeking mandates for their products, subsidies (in the form of cash payments from the government), and regulations or tariffs to keep more efficient competitors at bay. Baloney. That’s just ballsy of you to even say. Have you forgotten this little nugget ? Yes, that’s right. Koch Industries, while seeking to undo the Affordable Care Act for ordinary Americans, applied for “government spending”, or as you like to put it “crony capitalism.” Crony capitalism is much easier than competing in an open market. But it erodes our overall standard of living and stifles entrepreneurs by rewarding the politically favored rather than those who provide what consumers want. Who knows this better than Charles Koch himself, who spends millions and lends his name and clout to crony capitalism and eroding our overall standard of living, after all? Because every other company in a given industry is accepting market-distorting programs, Koch companies have had little option but to do so as well, simply to remain competitive and help sustain our 50,000 U.S.-based jobs. However, even when such policies benefit us, we only support the policies that enhance true economic freedom. Bullshit. If you did, you’d stop trying to put this entire country in bondage to oil consumptive profiteers. And your remarks following about ethanol would have more clout if they weren’t about “competing on a level playing field” and instead addressing the starvation and food price hikes that result from corn being used for ethanol instead of FOOD. Recent studies show that the poorest 10% of the population living in countries with the greatest economic freedom have 10 times the per capita income of the poorest citizens in countries with the least economic freedom. In other words, society as a whole benefits from greater economic freedom. I don’t even know what you’re trying to say here, Mr. Koch, but the economic “freedom” in Ireland pushed them into bankruptcy and government collapse. You fund efforts abroad, too, so I’m sure you cheered when the Irish got austerity measures shoved down their throats after corporations razed the country and left it bankrupt. But to measure the ‘per-capita income’ of the poorest citizens in countries with the greatest economic freedom assumes their “income” has the same purchasing power across the board, which it does not. This is just numeric word salad intended to sound educated and authoritative, but it means absolutely nothing. Even though it affects our business, as a matter of principle our company has been outspoken in defense of economic freedom. This country would be much better off if every company would do the same. Instead, we see far too many businesses that paint their tails white and run with the antelope. And in your case, Mr. Koch, you roll over in intellectual vomit and lie with the pigs in dung. Don’t presume to tell me what YOU think would be best for this country when you don’t give a damn about the ‘country’ beyond what it does to your bottom line. Your corporation would do well to step past its considerable bottom line, all of which inures to the benefit of you and your brother and your offspring, and think about the fact that you live in a world with people who actually bleed when they’re cut, die when they’re sick and untreated, and drown when the floods come. You may think you live on high ground, but what you’re trying to do is dig a hole for the rest of us and call yourself noble. I am confident that businesses like ours will hire more people and invest in more equipment when our country’s financial future looks more promising. Laying the groundwork for smaller, smarter government, especially at the federal level, is going to be tough. But it is essential for getting us back on the path to long-term prosperity. In other words, you’ll hire people when you can pay them nothing or when they cannot collectively bargain for benefits or wages. In laymen’s terms, slave labor. How extremely generous and optimistic of you. Hell has a special room in it for you. At the very bottom.
Continue reading …So it seems Charles Koch wrote an editorial while I was away. An editorial for the Rupert Murdoch-owned Wall Street Journal, where he spends an entire column saying a whole lot of nothing. An editorial where he misstates facts, figures, and twists up truth into his weird alternate reality. I feel compelled to respond to him. Dear Charles Koch, In your March 1st editorial, you make the following statements: Years of tremendous overspending by federal, state and local governments have brought us face-to-face with an economic crisis. Federal spending will total at least $3.8 trillion this year—double what it was 10 years ago. And unlike in 2001, when there was a small federal surplus, this year’s projected budget deficit is more than $1.6 trillion. This is a direct consequence of the costs of two wars which until 2008, were not added to the balance sheets. Funny how you fail to account for where the deficits arose, but are quick to point to their existence. Several trillions more in debt have been accumulated by state and local governments. States are looking at a combined total of more than $130 billion in budget shortfalls this year. Next year, they will be in even worse shape as most so-called stimulus payments end. Ironic that you would give any credit to the stimulus for helping states, given the enormous funds you’ve laid out to criticize any lawmaker who supported it. What hypocrisy is this? State and local governments are looking at shortfalls because tax revenues have not kept pace with expenditures. This is not the fault of individuals living in those states or municipalities. It is the direct effect of the failure of corporations to pay their fair share to do business in states, and the failure of those same corporations to employ workers in those states, causing those workers to rely upon governmental safety nets to get them by while their jobs are outsourced to countries where corporate profits can increase. For many years, I, my family and our company have contributed to a variety of intellectual and political causes working to solve these problems. Because of our activism, we’ve been vilified by various groups. Despite this criticism, we’re determined to keep contributing and standing up for those politicians, like Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, who are taking these challenges seriously. Let’s talk about your “activism”, because it goes far beyond just political philosophy. You fund groups who actively seek to promote lies about the current President’s place of birth, his legitimacy as a United States citizen, and undermine the mandate he received from voters in 2008. That’s not “standing up” for anything. Spending tens of millions — even hundreds of millions — to oppose climate change legislation isn’t “activism”. It’s serving your own financial self-interests. That’s not surprising, nor is it illegal, but it’s certainly not as noble and high minded as “solving these problems.” Here are some problems your tens or hundreds of millions could be solving: Preventing medical bankruptcy , which is still on the rise and will not end until all Americans have access to reasonably-priced health insurance BEFORE they get sick or fired. Preventing the consequences of climate change instead of denying it exists. Investing creatively in our future through green industry, high speed rail, and other projects which build up this country instead of tearing it down. Instead, you deny climate change, pay millions to lobby for the defeat of climate change legislation , buy politicians who must do your bidding and vote to de-fund the Affordable Care Act (and any other good and decent thing government does). You call this ‘activism’. I call it destruction. Federal data indicate how urgently we need reform: The unfunded liabilities of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid already exceed $106 trillion. That’s well over $300,000 for every man, woman and child in America (and exceeds the combined value of every U.S. bank account, stock certificate, building and piece of personal or public property). Again, you fail to note the cost of conducting two wars. If you were honest, you’d be paying your teabagging minions to be out protesting the war instead of gay marriage. But you’re not honest, not even a little bit honest. In fact, I doubt there’s anything honest in this entire editorial of yours at all, other than the words you DIDN’T say: You don’t give a damn whether the government goes under at all. You’d like it to go under, because in your world, corporations are king. No, you say? I say yes, and you confirm it right here: Government spending on business only aggravates the problem. Too many businesses have successfully lobbied for special favors and treatment by seeking mandates for their products, subsidies (in the form of cash payments from the government), and regulations or tariffs to keep more efficient competitors at bay. Baloney. That’s just ballsy of you to even say. Have you forgotten this little nugget ? Yes, that’s right. Koch Industries, while seeking to undo the Affordable Care Act for ordinary Americans, applied for “government spending”, or as you like to put it “crony capitalism.” Crony capitalism is much easier than competing in an open market. But it erodes our overall standard of living and stifles entrepreneurs by rewarding the politically favored rather than those who provide what consumers want. Who knows this better than Charles Koch himself, who spends millions and lends his name and clout to crony capitalism and eroding our overall standard of living, after all? Because every other company in a given industry is accepting market-distorting programs, Koch companies have had little option but to do so as well, simply to remain competitive and help sustain our 50,000 U.S.-based jobs. However, even when such policies benefit us, we only support the policies that enhance true economic freedom. Bullshit. If you did, you’d stop trying to put this entire country in bondage to oil consumptive profiteers. And your remarks following about ethanol would have more clout if they weren’t about “competing on a level playing field” and instead addressing the starvation and food price hikes that result from corn being used for ethanol instead of FOOD. Recent studies show that the poorest 10% of the population living in countries with the greatest economic freedom have 10 times the per capita income of the poorest citizens in countries with the least economic freedom. In other words, society as a whole benefits from greater economic freedom. I don’t even know what you’re trying to say here, Mr. Koch, but the economic “freedom” in Ireland pushed them into bankruptcy and government collapse. You fund efforts abroad, too, so I’m sure you cheered when the Irish got austerity measures shoved down their throats after corporations razed the country and left it bankrupt. But to measure the ‘per-capita income’ of the poorest citizens in countries with the greatest economic freedom assumes their “income” has the same purchasing power across the board, which it does not. This is just numeric word salad intended to sound educated and authoritative, but it means absolutely nothing. Even though it affects our business, as a matter of principle our company has been outspoken in defense of economic freedom. This country would be much better off if every company would do the same. Instead, we see far too many businesses that paint their tails white and run with the antelope. And in your case, Mr. Koch, you roll over in intellectual vomit and lie with the pigs in dung. Don’t presume to tell me what YOU think would be best for this country when you don’t give a damn about the ‘country’ beyond what it does to your bottom line. Your corporation would do well to step past its considerable bottom line, all of which inures to the benefit of you and your brother and your offspring, and think about the fact that you live in a world with people who actually bleed when they’re cut, die when they’re sick and untreated, and drown when the floods come. You may think you live on high ground, but what you’re trying to do is dig a hole for the rest of us and call yourself noble. I am confident that businesses like ours will hire more people and invest in more equipment when our country’s financial future looks more promising. Laying the groundwork for smaller, smarter government, especially at the federal level, is going to be tough. But it is essential for getting us back on the path to long-term prosperity. In other words, you’ll hire people when you can pay them nothing or when they cannot collectively bargain for benefits or wages. In laymen’s terms, slave labor. How extremely generous and optimistic of you. Hell has a special room in it for you. At the very bottom.
Continue reading …Newsweek and Daily Beast editor Tina Brown flattered This Week host Christiane Amanpour by placing her on a list of 150 women who “shake the world.” The ABC anchor responded to this praise by featuring Brown on her Sunday show, touting the females on the list (which describes the host as “one of the world's most renowned journalists”). She enthused, “Who could fail to be optimistic?” On the show, Amanpour never mentioned her inclusion in this profile. Those not featured? Amanpour's ABC News colleagues, World News anchor Diane Sawyer and Good Morning America co-host Robin Roberts, despite the fact that their shows are on five days a week and have higher ratings. In addition to ignoring her place amongst these women, Amanpour also neglected to note that she will be participating in a panel on the same topic. ” And we'll be watching the women's summit, the Daily Beast/Newsweek that's coming up this week ,” she vaguely explained at the close of the segment. The ABC anchor hyped Brown …”You are also going to show us the new cover of 'Newsweek,' which we're going to put up. And it is about 150 women who shake the world with Hillary Clinton as the cover.” Amanpour's entry in the list asserts: One of the world's most renowned journalists, Christiane Amanpour is anchor of ABC's Sunday-morning political-affairs program and also hosts prime-time documentaries on international subjects. She has reported on and from Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan, Somalia, and Israel, among other regions. She has received every major broadcast award and was made a Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire for her “highly distinguished, innovative contribution” to journalism. Unsurprisingly, the list is full of liberal women. Democratic Senator Kristen Gillibrand, Democratic Congresswomen Gabrielle Giffords and Nancy Pelosi were included. A few token Republicans, such as Laura Bush and Fran Townsend were allowed. A partial transcript of the segment, which aired at 10:45am EST on March 6, follows:
Continue reading …