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You have to hand it to Scott Walker — he’s a wingnut true believer, with the charming personality of a rock and absolutely all the political instincts of a dead fish. Because Wisconsin voters are awake now, they know that class war is being waged, and they’re not going to sit and take it: MADISON, Wis. — Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker’s explosive proposal to take nearly all collective bargaining rights away from most public workers represents just one piece of his vision for the state’s future. Now he’s ready to reveal the rest. With the union rights proposal stuck in a legislative stalemate thanks to runaway Senate Democrats, Walker planned to forge ahead with the Tuesday release of his two-year spending plan that will include major cuts to schools and local governments to help close a projected $3.6 billion budget shortfall. Tens of thousands of protesters have demonstrated for two weeks against Walker’s collective bargaining proposal, which he calls necessary to free local governments from having to bargain with public employee unions as they deal with the cuts he’ll outline Tuesday. Schools last week started putting teachers on notice that their contracts may not be renewed for next year given the budget uncertainty. Walker has confirmed he will propose cutting education aid by about $900 million, or 9 percent statewide. School leaders are bracing for more bad news. The governor is expected Tuesday to announce a new revenue limit that would require a $500 per-pupil reduction in property tax authority. The limits, in place since 1993, have gradually grown to reflect increasing education costs. That part of Walker’s proposal alone would reduce the money available to the state’s 424 districts by 7 percent, or nearly $600 million , based on a study done by University of Wisconsin-Madison economics professor Andrew Reschovsky. Looks like his arrogance will cost him big-time . A new poll shows that an estimate 1.1 million Wisconsin voters are willing to sign his recall petition, and that of eight Republican state senators. Yes, elections have consequences. But when you act as if you’re the only person whose opinions count, well, the voters have a way of reminding you otherwise.

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‘Ethicist’ Columnist Randy Cohen Departs New York Times, Leaving Leftist Legacy Behind

After 12 years and 614 columns (by his count), Randy Cohen has penned his last “Ethicist” column for the New York Times Magazine , signing off last Sunday. Cohen’s columns, in which he gave letter-writers advice on the right thing to do in ethically sticky situations, often glanced over cultural and ideological topics, which Cohen consistently addressed from a pungent left-wing perspective. According to the paper's veteran columnist, Bush was an incompetent and insane president who lied us into war, socialism is a good thing, Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates should have sued the police, and no one can work for a tobacco company in good conscience. Below are some liberal lowlights from Cohen, both from his column, his blog, and various television appearances. In an October 24, 2010 column, Cohen wrote that no one could honorably work for a tobacco company. The gravity of the misdeeds is also significant. I believe, for example, nobody may honorably work for a tobacco company, the maker of a toxic product that, used as directed, annually kills 400,000 Americans. How grave is too grave? Alas, there is no universal bright line. But your employer seems to have crossed yours. On June 20, 2010 Cohen defended socialism's good name: Incidentally, not that the president is one, but how does it defame a person to call him a “socialist” (outside of nutty far-right circles) — a set of ideas many advanced Western democracies find congenial, what with the accessible health-care, affordable higher education and good public transportation? In a July 27, 2009 blog item on nytimes.com, he wrote of the then-current controversy over Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates, urging Gates to sue the Cambridge police for arresting him for disorderly conduct, arguing that a lawsuit would be a valuable tool to probe “the troubled history of police interactions with African-Americans.” Cohen judged the entire episode through the prism of race, failing to address the fact that at least two of Crowley's black fellow officers back him up and not Gates.

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‘Ethicist’ Columnist Randy Cohen Departs New York Times, Leaving Leftist Legacy Behind

After 12 years and 614 columns (by his count), Randy Cohen has penned his last “Ethicist” column for the New York Times Magazine , signing off last Sunday. Cohen’s columns, in which he gave letter-writers advice on the right thing to do in ethically sticky situations, often glanced over cultural and ideological topics, which Cohen consistently addressed from a pungent left-wing perspective. According to the paper's veteran columnist, Bush was an incompetent and insane president who lied us into war, socialism is a good thing, Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates should have sued the police, and no one can work for a tobacco company in good conscience. Below are some liberal lowlights from Cohen, both from his column, his blog, and various television appearances. In an October 24, 2010 column, Cohen wrote that no one could honorably work for a tobacco company. The gravity of the misdeeds is also significant. I believe, for example, nobody may honorably work for a tobacco company, the maker of a toxic product that, used as directed, annually kills 400,000 Americans. How grave is too grave? Alas, there is no universal bright line. But your employer seems to have crossed yours. On June 20, 2010 Cohen defended socialism's good name: Incidentally, not that the president is one, but how does it defame a person to call him a “socialist” (outside of nutty far-right circles) — a set of ideas many advanced Western democracies find congenial, what with the accessible health-care, affordable higher education and good public transportation? In a July 27, 2009 blog item on nytimes.com, he wrote of the then-current controversy over Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates, urging Gates to sue the Cambridge police for arresting him for disorderly conduct, arguing that a lawsuit would be a valuable tool to probe “the troubled history of police interactions with African-Americans.” Cohen judged the entire episode through the prism of race, failing to address the fact that at least two of Crowley's black fellow officers back him up and not Gates.

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Rush Limbaugh certainly has plenty of material for the bashing of Michelle Obama and the National Organization for Women. I’m not going to write up a transcript because I got nauseous after one listen, but it’s safe to say that he’s the #1 King of Sleaze and all others that are flooding our airwaves and teevee sets since Obama was elected are but hack imitators when it comes to being vulgar to the ladies. He’s been attacking women’s groups for years, but the MSM just calls him an entertainer. And I still don’t understand why it’s suddenly fine to attack the First Lady, Here’s one of his latest rants against Michelle Obama:. Limbaugh mocks Michelle Obama over how she asked for prayers. What a class fellow.

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Following up on Heather’s post about McCain and Lieberman’s desire for action against Libya, the neocons are starting to chant for more action. In an amazing show of bravado, a group of forty political analysts, including more than a dozen former officials of former President GW Bush, have posted a letter in the Foreign Policy Initiative website calling for President Obama to bring some “American exceptionalism” in the form of gunboat diplomacy to Libya . It really is amazingly idiotic drivel for such Very Serious People to voice. Therefore, we recommend the United States, in conjunction with NATO allies, take the following specific actions immediately:

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Connecting Bush, Not Obama to High Prices:

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Most of my problems with the death penalty have more to do with its uneven application by race and class, the leaning heavily on coerced testimony and shaky evidence, and the questionable actions of politically ambitious prosecutors. Far too often, this leads to the conviction of the wrong person. But this one? I think we have it nailed. That said, as a good liberal, I should have know there were good reasons why she was so very, very twisted, and that’s where I have a real problem with the death penalty: These are people that we, as a society, have failed. A Washington state resident who once bragged she was going to take her Minutemen group to the “next level” was sentenced to death Tuesday for plotting a deadly home invasion that took the life of a 9-year-old Arivaca girl and her father. A Pima County jury deliberated four hours over two days before deciding Shawna Forde, 43, should join the other two women on Arizona’s death row. Forde, 43, was convicted Feb. 14 of first-degree murder in the May 30, 2009, deaths of Raul Junior Flores, 29, and Brisenia Flores, 9, and of attempted first-degree murder in the shooting of Gina Gonzalez, Flores’ wife and Brisenia’s mother. Jurors were told Forde needed money for her border protection group, Minutemen American Defense, and decided to rob drug smugglers near the border. Gonzalez testified her husband opened the door of their home to a man and a woman claiming to be law enforcement officers looking for fugitives. The man opened fire on the couple when Junior Flores questioned their story and their daughter was shot at point-blank range while pleading for her life, Gonzalez told jurors. A handful of inexpensive jewelry was later found in Forde’s possession. Defense attorney Jill Thorpe asked jurors to spare Ford’s life, saying she was a “broken person” who suffered repeated acts of sexual and physical abuse and abandonment as a child. The abuse and a subsequent stroke resulted in brain damage that left Forde vulnerable to manipulation, Thorpe said. She was unable to assess people or change course, she said. Forde’s childhood also caused her to develop a narcissistic personality that led her to make to outlandish claims and an inability to accept responsibility for her involvement in the Floreses’ deaths, Thorpe said.

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On Thursday's front page of The Washington Post, reporter John Wagner wrote of how Maryland's top three leaders are Catholics but are “crossing the hierarchy” of the church by imposing “gay marriage” on the state: “But the presence of three Catholics at the helm in Annapolis hasn't stopped a same-sex marriage bill from wending its way through the legislature, triggering deep disappointment among church leaders as it suggests a waning of Catholic influence in this heavily Catholic state.” But it must have surprised readers that those “church leaders” Wagner referred to were nowhere to be found in this Post story, not even their names. Cardinal Donald Wuerl oversees the suburban Maryland counties of the Washington area, and Archbishop Edwin O'Brien oversees Gov. Martin O'Malley's Baltimore stomping grounds. Wagner somehow could not find them in his phone book. It's not as if these prelates have been quiet on the “gay marriage” issue in Maryland . Archbishop O'Brien just took great exception to the “hatemonger” label in his newspaper the Catholic Review: Unfortunately, such sweeping characterizations took on additional meaning last week when Senator James Brochin (whose district encompasses the parishes of Immaculate Heart of Mary, Church of the Nativity, St. Pius X and Immaculate Conception, Towson) cited the tone of testimony offered by some who spoke against the bill at the hearing as the reason he was changing his publicly-stated position in support of traditional marriage, to now vote in support of redefining marriage. In spite of Senator Brochin’s claim that he only “heard hate and venom coming out of that hearing,” witness after witness voiced their opposition, offering no such judgments or invective, including members of our Maryland Catholic Conference and an Archdiocesan parish. Their testimonies can be viewed at catholicreview.org/matysekblog. The notion that anyone opposed to same-sex marriage is a bigot or “hate monger” is not only unfair and insulting, it also ignores the very belief system that underpins our support for marriage. Wagner and the Post seemed to want to let Catholic Democrats speak for themselves, and not create any public-relations problems for them by letting the actual church leaders discuss their opinions of these men and their John Kerry-style “not a Catholic on the day job” philosophy. Instead, Wagner quoted the top Catholic lobbyist, which doesn't have the same impact: Mary Ellen Russell, executive director of the Maryland Catholic Conference, a leading opponent of same-sex marriage, said she has been distressed by the debate and the governor's decision. “It's always troubling when someone in such a public position openly disagrees with the church,” she said, calling defeat of the legislation “a critically important issue for the church.” Wagner's report does dare to inquire about the depth of the politicians' practice of their faith. The story begins with Gov. O'Malley “regularly attends a weekday Mass and has sent his four children to Catholic schools” and later notes that neither House Speaker Michael Busch or Senate President Mike Miller is a regular churchgoer. But have top church leaders personally contacted these Catholic politicians on this “critically important” issue? Or are they leaving all the phone calls to the church lobbyists? This is certainly a question worth investigating that would strengthen the Post's story if the emphasis was on crossing the “Catholic hierarchy.” Putting that story on the front page without any apparent contact with the hierarchy is like walking into public without pants.

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The conflict inherent between policy and principle continues to this day The international community has been compromised by the revolution sweeping the Arab world. In three uncertain weeks, the United States vacillated from urging stability to shore up a strategic ally in Hosni Mubarak to cheering his overthrow. France trod the same path in Tunisia. Happily, the foreign minister Michèle Alliot-Marie, whose first reaction to the uprising was to offer Ben Ali France’s superior knowledge in riot control, has finally resigned. But her family’s involvement with the ancien regime (her parents had shares in a property company owned by a businessman close to the regime) provided its own morality play. Few were disinterested observers. When it came to the crunch, such as organising the interrogation under torture of jihadis picked up in Pakistan, the CIA, among others, traded with the darkest elements of Mubarak’s regime being denounced with such ardour today. Russia and China, both of whom have much to fear from spontaneous demonstrations by their own people, have fared little better. The conflict inherent between policy and principle continues to this day. While the world’s attention has been focused on a mad colonel’s dying days, Libyan troops are not alone in firing on unarmed demonstrators. After a mass demonstration in another Tahrir Square, this time in Baghdad, Iraq’s security forces detained 300 people, among them prominent journalists, artists and intellectuals, some of whom were later beaten up or tortured in custody . At least 29 died nationwide in Iraq’s “day of rage”. Rather than denounce an ally in Nouri al-Maliki, whose coalition government Washington toiled hard and for many months to create, the US embassy in Baghdad played down the violence. Three lessons should be drawn from the revolutions taking place in Libya, Egypt, Tunisia and elsewhere. The first is that they belong to the people who made them. The Libyans, Egyptians and Tunisians have made enormous personal sacrifices to get this far, humbling eyewitnesses with their determination and heroism. They do not want, nor have they yet sought foreign intervention . The ownership of change across the Middle East does not, however, make international action irrelevant. The vote in the United Nations to impose travel and asset sanctions on Gaddafi and his entourage broke new ground for the international support it mustered, helped not least by the Arab League, the African Union and support from Libya’s own US mission, which defected en masse. It is unlikely to continue, but the process of rediscovering the benefits of genuine international coalitions and institutions like the human rights council is a healthy

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Wisconsin Dem Assemblyman Tells GOP Assemblywoman ‘You Are F–king Dead,’ Media Mum

A Wisconsin Democrat Assemblyman turned to a Republican Assemblywoman in the middle of a legislative session Friday and said, “You are f–king dead.” Despite the following report from the Northwestern at 12:53 PM Monday, no major media outlet other than Fox News has covered this disgusting story: Rep. Gordon Hintz, D-Oshkosh, called Rep. Michelle Litjens, R-Winneconne, Monday morning to apologize for his comments that Litjens described as containing an obscenity and the words “you’re dead.” Last week, he accepted responsibility for being issued an ordinance violation for visiting a massage parlor in Appleton that was the subject of a prostitution sting. The Daily Caller's Jeff Poor on Monday linked to the website of Wisconsin's Newsradio 620 WTMJ which judging by the first comment reported as early as 10:43 AM: Last Friday…. after the Assembly voted to engross the Budget Repair Bill, Hintz turned to a female colleague, Rep. Michelle Litjens and said: “You are F***king dead!” In this post-Gabrielle Giffords world, with calls for a new civility, a man that was just busted in the middle of a prostitution sting says “You are f–king dead” to a woman on the floor of the Wisconsin assembly, and America's media couldn't care less. Despite this being reported no later than 10:43 AM, a Google news search identified that apart from Wisconsin outlets, only Fox and conservative websites thought this was at all newsworthy. As of 12:30 AM Tuesday, according to LexisNexis, no major news outlets reported this event. Closed-caption records for ABC's “World News,” CBS's “Evening News,” and NBC's “Night News” also found no coverage of this issue. Imagine for a moment Hintz was a Republican and Litjens a Democrat. This likely would have been the lead story for all three broadcast evening news programs as well as the focus of every hour of reporting on CNN and MSNBC with calls for Hintz's resignation. But much like what happened at ABC's town hall meeting when a survivor of the Giffords shootings said “You are dead” to a Tea Party leader in the audience, our media clearly don't care when liberals publicly threaten conservatives. Now this standard extends to a male Democrat elected official vulgarly assaulting a female Republican on an Assembly floor. Makes one think it's journalism that's bleeping dead! (H/T Weasel Zippers )

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