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 )
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Inviting Egyptian-born writer and activist Mona Eltahawy to J Street’s Conference this past weekend may have been seen by some as a provocative move but seen in context is entirely consistent with their stated aims “to promote American leadership to end the Arab-Israeli and Israel-Palestinian conflicts peacefully and diplomatically” and [J Street] “supports a new direction for American policy in the Middle East – diplomatic solutions over military ones” If anyone was concerned beforehand they needn’t have worried. She was greeted with a standing ovation, as was Sara Benninga of East Jerusalem’s Sheikh Jarrah Solidarity movement the night before. Eltahawy gets standing ovation when she calls on peaceful revolution to come to Israel and Palestine ——————————————————————————————- Eltahawy’s closing challenge was that just as the Arab dictators responded late and stupidly to the demands of the people, Israel and Obama and its friends are responding late to the political movement afoot. They were completely tone-deaf to Gaza, she said; as Arabs everywhere watched Palestinians being “torn apart.” It was a “massacre,” she said twice. Great to hear that from a Jewish pulpit. “My question to J street and to Israel, do you want to be ten days too late, do you want to be like these dictators that [Netanyahu]… loves so dearly… the people have outpaced the Obama administration…Here’s my challenge to you–” Just as Egyptians and Tunisians “have managed to get rid of the unriddable…” without burning one foreign flag, “the best of Gandhi and Martin Luther King combined,” it is time “to march for the freedom and dignity of our Palestinian brothers and sisters, and we will. “Make that call, I will be with you. It’s about time, and it’s something that everyone is thinking about.” She added, “This is not something that is supposed to scare you.. Embrace.. nonviolence. Millions of Arabs peacefully dismantled dictatorships ….Embrace them and reach out to them, and we too will march for the freedom and dignity of Palestinians.. Cll for that nonviolent revolution for freedom and dignity for Palestians, and I will be there.” Wild cheers. The clip above is an excerpt from her opening remarks. A complete version is here . Full video of the panel discussion (moderated by Steve Clemons) can be seen here [90 min].
Continue reading …Click here to view this media As Steve Benen pointed out this Sunday , Mitch Daniels probably really would have preferred that Chris Wallace had not have pointed out his record as the budget director for George W. Bush. A couple of days ago, David Brooks praised Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels (R) for his record of fiscal responsibility. That record, in Brooks’ vision, starts in 2004 when Daniels was elected to statewide office. But there’s also that inconvenient period in which Daniels was Bush’s budget director, and the U.S. government began the most fiscally irresponsible period in American history. This fails on a whole lot of levels. It’s true that Daniels, as Bush’s budget director, was helping shape the books during an economic downturn, but I seem to recall Republicans concluding that these details are irrelevant — Obama inherited the worst economy since the Great Depression, but as far as the GOP is concerned, that’s not a good excuse for large deficits. For that matter, Daniels is correct that his tenure also included 9/11 and the launch of two wars, but every president in American history raised taxes to help pay for previous U.S. wars, to prevent deficits from spiraling out of control. Bush, with Daniels’ blessing, approved two massive tax cuts that ultimately added $5 trillion to the debt in just eight years. It’s that same debt that Daniels believes will destroy the country. Funny, he didn’t think that that way when he was directly responsible for making the problem worse. In other words, when evaluating Daniels for federal office, just pay no attention to his only federal experience. He’s counting on Americans having poor memories. Transcript below the fold. WALLACE: You — you also have a record as the first budget director under President Bush 43, George W. Bush. When you came in, this country have an annual surplus for the first time in 30 years of $236 billion. When you left, two and a half years later, the deficit was $400 billion. You were also there when President Bush launched his Medicare Drug Benefit Plan that now costs $60 billion a year. I know there was a recession, but do you think it was wise at a time when we were fighting two wars to have two tax cuts and launch a huge new entitlement? DANIELS: Well, it wasn’t just the recession. It was recession, two wars and a terrorist attack that led to a whole new category called Homeland Security. So nobody was less happy than I to see the surplus go away, but it was going away no matter who was the president. You know, Chris, I was proud to be part of that administration. Yes, I think the original tax cuts were good and — and timely and helped the economy to recover very, very quickly from that recession. But, if you want to know what I think about fiscal issues, don’t look at two and a half years where I was in the supporting cast with no vote. Look at six years where I was in a responsible position, submitting budgets and fighting for them. And, you know, there’s the record that — that I think is — is most accurate.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media As Steve Benen pointed out this Sunday , Mitch Daniels probably really would have preferred that Chris Wallace had not have pointed out his record as the budget director for George W. Bush. A couple of days ago, David Brooks praised Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels (R) for his record of fiscal responsibility. That record, in Brooks’ vision, starts in 2004 when Daniels was elected to statewide office. But there’s also that inconvenient period in which Daniels was Bush’s budget director, and the U.S. government began the most fiscally irresponsible period in American history. This fails on a whole lot of levels. It’s true that Daniels, as Bush’s budget director, was helping shape the books during an economic downturn, but I seem to recall Republicans concluding that these details are irrelevant — Obama inherited the worst economy since the Great Depression, but as far as the GOP is concerned, that’s not a good excuse for large deficits. For that matter, Daniels is correct that his tenure also included 9/11 and the launch of two wars, but every president in American history raised taxes to help pay for previous U.S. wars, to prevent deficits from spiraling out of control. Bush, with Daniels’ blessing, approved two massive tax cuts that ultimately added $5 trillion to the debt in just eight years. It’s that same debt that Daniels believes will destroy the country. Funny, he didn’t think that that way when he was directly responsible for making the problem worse. In other words, when evaluating Daniels for federal office, just pay no attention to his only federal experience. He’s counting on Americans having poor memories. Transcript below the fold. WALLACE: You — you also have a record as the first budget director under President Bush 43, George W. Bush. When you came in, this country have an annual surplus for the first time in 30 years of $236 billion. When you left, two and a half years later, the deficit was $400 billion. You were also there when President Bush launched his Medicare Drug Benefit Plan that now costs $60 billion a year. I know there was a recession, but do you think it was wise at a time when we were fighting two wars to have two tax cuts and launch a huge new entitlement? DANIELS: Well, it wasn’t just the recession. It was recession, two wars and a terrorist attack that led to a whole new category called Homeland Security. So nobody was less happy than I to see the surplus go away, but it was going away no matter who was the president. You know, Chris, I was proud to be part of that administration. Yes, I think the original tax cuts were good and — and timely and helped the economy to recover very, very quickly from that recession. But, if you want to know what I think about fiscal issues, don’t look at two and a half years where I was in the supporting cast with no vote. Look at six years where I was in a responsible position, submitting budgets and fighting for them. And, you know, there’s the record that — that I think is — is most accurate.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media (h/t David at VideoCafe) Consistency and those niggling little details are the bugaboos to the conservative ideology. It’s easy to say that you want to privatize Social Security for future recipients, but that leaves the very real budget problem of knowing how to pay for current recipients, doesn’t it? Where does that money come from? And if you allow those 20 year olds to take those FICA taxes to some private, non-government backed entity, what exactly happens if at 70 years old, their 401ks (or whatever vehicle is chosen) are worthless because the financial institutions have failed, like they did just over two years ago? Do you tell those 70 year olds, “Gee, that’s a shame, but thems the breaks?” Likewise, when you’re dealing with Medicare, it’s very easy to say that it’s more efficient to offer vouchers to recipients…but then those niggling details crop up. For as much as Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels likens Medicare to a top down monstrosity, the reality is that Medicare is a non-profit enterprise. Unlike private insurance companies, whose sole purpose is to spend as little money on your medical costs as possible so as to offer a bigger profit to their executives and shareholders. So what happens when you need expensive care? For Daniels, maybe there needs to be a conversation about how your life just isn’t worth the cash required. But who is in charge of making that decision, Mitch? Daniels says that it should be up to the patient, but that isn’t the way it would work. How many health insurance companies let their customers decide the care they want? So we come back to the absolutely unacceptable notion of rationing health care, based on what? Your income/socio-economic level? Your age? Even the statistical analysis of outcomes or underwriting depersonalizes and dehumanizes people in need of treatment. How would you feel if these companies told you your life isn’t worth the expense? WALLACE: You talked about Medicare 2.0, private vouchers, not a government program? DANIELS: It will be a government program, but instead of a top- down monstrosity that we have today, once again I would divide the program and say to those who are in it or who are about to be in it, nothing will change for you. But I think for the young people coming up who are going to shoulder the bill, we ought to trust them to make more of their own decisions. You could, again, concentrate the resources on the poorest people, and also in this case the least healthy people, people who are better off — WALLACE: But you’d give them a private voucher so they could choose their own insurance plan? DANIELS: I would. WALLACE: You even say the government should put limits on end- of-life care. Are you talking about what Sarah Palin called the death panels? DANIELS: No, I didn’t say government should put limits on this, but what I’m worried about is the government making these decisions. I just stated what I think is a simple fact. I wish it wasn’t, but I think it is. We cannot afford in an aging society to pay for the most expensive technology every — for every single person regardless of income to the very, very last day. WALLACE: Who makes that decision? DANIELS: I think it has — at least a part of it has to be the family and the patient himself or herself. I mean there — (CROSSTALK) WALLACE: Does the government at some point say we can’t afford to give the 92-year-old the liver transplant? DANIELS: Chris, I’ve told you, I think with some specificity, what I think ought to happen in Social Security and Medicare. I just answered the question honestly. I think this problem will have to be addressed. I don’t pretend to have an exact answer to this one, except that autopilot won’t work. And surprisingly, it’s Chris Wallace who points this out to Daniels, who, realizing he’s been caught in the very details that make his plan unworkable, just refuses to respond any more. Transcripts below the fold WALLACE: …And at the CPAC conference two weeks ago, you talked about the greatest threat facing this country. Let’s watch. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) DANIELS: We face an enemy lethal (inaudible) and even more implacable than those America has defeated before. I refer, of course, to the debt our nation has amassed for itself over decades of indulgences. It is the new red menace, this time consisting of ink. (END VIDEO CLIP) WALLACE: I want to do a lightning round because we have limited time. Quick questions, quick answers. What would you do about Social Security? DANIELS: I would bifurcate it. I would say those in the program or approaching it, a deal is a deal, you’re good to go, nothing changes. For the young people who are paying for today’s retirees and tomorrow’s, we want you to have something when you retire. We will need a brand new compact. I think it starts with means testing, which is to say we shouldn’t send a pension check to Donald Trump. We should concentrate the resources on those who are going to need them the most. I think we should in the future raise the retirement age to catch up to the medical reality of our time. I think we should protect the benefits against inflation, but not overprotect them. Chris, as I said many times in the past, that is my cut at it. If somebody has another route that gets us with assurance to the same results, I would like to hear it, because I just want to see a solution to this before it destroys the America we know. WALLACE: You talked about Medicare 2.0, private vouchers, not a government program? DANIELS: It will be a government program, but instead of a top- down monstrosity that we have today, once again I would divide the program and say to those who are in it or who are about to be in it, nothing will change for you. But I think for the young people coming up who are going to shoulder the bill, we ought to trust them to make more of their own decisions. You could, again, concentrate the resources on the poorest people, and also in this case the least healthy people, people who are better off — WALLACE: But you’d give them a private voucher so they could choose their own insurance plan? DANIELS: I would. WALLACE: You even say the government should put limits on end- of-life care. Are you talking about what Sarah Palin called the death panels? DANIELS: No, I didn’t say government should put limits on this, but what I’m worried about is the government making these decisions. I just stated what I think is a simple fact. I wish it wasn’t, but I think it is. We cannot afford in an aging society to pay for the most expensive technology every — for every single person regardless of income to the very, very last day. WALLACE: Who makes that decision? DANIELS: I think it has — at least a part of it has to be the family and the patient himself or herself. I mean there — (CROSSTALK) WALLACE: Does the government at some point say we can’t afford to give the 92-year-old the liver transplant? DANIELS: Chris, I’ve told you, I think with some specificity, what I think ought to happen in Social Security and Medicare. I just answered the question honestly. I think this problem will have to be addressed. I don’t pretend to have an exact answer to this one, except that autopilot won’t work.
Continue reading …In a speech House Speaker John Boehner gave to the audience of National Religious Broadcasters, he basically shut down the conservative narrative about shutting down the federal government that has been going on since they took back the House. (forward to the 18 minute mark of the video to spare yourself needless migraine material) LA Times: House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) told a convention of religious broadcasters in Nashville on Sunday evening that a federal government shutdown was not appropriate and not what the electorate wanted. His remarks were the latest sign that congressional leaders were backing away from the brink of a shutdown. “Americans want the government to stay open, and they want it to spend less money,” Boehner said. “We don’t need to shut down the government to accomplish that. We just need to do what the American people are asking of us.” He cited “the moral responsibility” to reduce the federal deficit and cut government largesse while keeping the government open, but he said Congress also had a responsibility to address Social Security and Medicare spending. Clearly these statements will anger his Tea Party base. Are we not people? If words can titillate you, then any mention of not raising the debt limit or holding it hostage to destroy Social Security and Medicare/CAID clearly creates massive orgasms within the Tea Party movement and the FOX Business Network. The fact that Boehner said the American people do not want a federal government shutdown undermines the Bachmann/Palin/Limbaugh/Beck/FOX line of attack and immediately causes unwanted impotence for these hyped-up individuals. I wonder how long it will take him to retract his words or say he was misquoted …
Continue reading …Click here to view this media It was bad enough that most of the media — outside of the liberal anchors at MSNBC — refused to recognize the import of the content of that prank phone call to Scott Walker . Even more appalling was watching this weekend as the Beltway Villagers bent over backwards to thoroughly dismiss the story — led by Howard Kurtz and the execrable Amy Holmes at CNN’s Reliable Sources on Sunday. Their chief means of dismissing the story was to compare the Buffalo Beast’s revealing hoax call as “not journalistic” while comparing it to the treatment given the hoax ACORN videos of 2009: HOLMES: Right. Well, I think because it fits their ideological framework. And I looked at this, and he was hailed as “Most Intriguing Person of the Day” by CNN. And you didn’t see the hand-wringing over journalistic ethics like you did, say, in the ACORN case, when those two young people used the same sorts of tactics of being an impostor and sort of — some people would say tricking people into participating in this. And there, there was a huge discussion about journalism and is this fair, is this right? In this, it was, like, he’s a hero. He accomplished a feat, as you just heard. … KURTZ: And as Amy points out though, when the ACORN sting happened — you remember James O’Keefe and the pimp and the prostitute — liberal commentators all attacked them, but Fox News played them up and that story up in a way that was much more favorable. So how much of this is ideological. HOLMES: Right. And the ACORN folks, they said that they were activists. They were very explicit about their point of view, where, in this case, oh, well, maybe he’s a blogger, maybe he’s a journalist. It doesn’t really matter and he doesn’t get any kind of criticism for his methods. But how did Kurtz and Co. — including Holmes — treat the ACORN videos back in 2009 ? Well, as it happens, they attacked other media outlets for their reluctance to treat the videos as legitimate! KURTZ: But much of the mainstream media was well behind on this story. CNN also jumped on the budding scandal 10 days ago, though not with anything approaching Fox’s intensity. But it took five days to hit the CBS “Evening News” and six days to be reported by ABC’s “World News,” NBC “Nightly News” and MSNBC. Chris, there was two conservative activists, James O’Keefe and Hannah Giles, posing as a pimp and a ho, get this footage with a hidden camera. Is that journalism? CILLIZZA: I think there is a blurry line of what journalism is now, Howie, with video on demand, with blogs. I will go back to a somewhat less controversial example. Mayhill Fowler, a Democratic donor, wound up in a San Francisco fund-raiser for Barack Obama in which he said some voters in Pennsylvania are “embittered and cling to their guns.” … HOLMES: If — if liberal activist had walked into the Heritage Foundation, for example, and conducted the same sort of sting operation, it would have been on the front page of The Washington Post in a day. I think that what we’re seeing here was — is this just a right- wing, sort of, fringe story that the mainstream media didn’t want to touch with a 10-foot pole, or this a real story about corruption at this organization? And I think the mainstream media, because it was conservative activists going into a liberal organization, were a little bit wary, I would say, of the story. Indeed, Kurtz even penned the following line in the Washington Post , defending the content of the videos: Nearly everyone dismissed Beck’s charge that the president is a racist, but the ACORN videos he and Hannity trumpeted on Fox proved to be a legitimate story. But as the folks at FAIR detailed at the time, not only did the mainstream media lap it all up avidly, there was almost nothing legitimate at all in the ACORN videos — beginning with the methods used to obtain the videos, but even more significantly, in the faked conclusions they were intended to lead observers to reach. The hoax in those videos was not only perpetrated on the videos’ subject, but on their intended audience as well. ( Media Matters has the definitive details of the scope of the hoax.) It’s standard modus operandi Andrew Breitbart and Co. Of course, Kurtz defended Breitbart even through the Shirley Sherrod fiasco, too. He only seemed to wake up when O’Keefe tried to scam a CNN reporter — at which point he began dismissing him as a “fake pimp” . So it was the theme of Sunday’s show that there was nothing, NOTHING worth legitimately reporting on in the case of the Walker hoax, too — as Jim Warren tried to emphasize: WARREN: Yes. I mean, on one hand, I thought it was fascinating and revealing, what was going on in the governor’s mind in a certain sort of cynical pragmatism that was playing out on his side. At the same time, I didn’t see this guy as performing any vaguely legitimate form of journalism. He was perpetuating an absolute hoax, starting with misidentifying himself. Although I think there are times when mainstream legitimate journalists can misidentify themselves. But, boy, it has to be for higher causes — maybe saving lives or actually revealing some huge systemic government fraud. In a case like this, just to embarrass, no. The problem for Warren, Kurtz, and Holmes et. al. is that the hoax wasn’t simply an attempt to embarrass Walker — it legitimately laid bare, through well-known means of trickery, the cozy relationship between Walker and his financial beneficiaries. As the WaPo’s Greg Sargent put it at the time : UPDATE, 11:54 a.m.: In a key detail, Walker reveals that he is, in effect, laying a trap for Wisconsin Dems. He says he is mulling inviting the Senate and Assembly Dem and GOP leaders to sit down and talk, but only if all the missing Senate Dems return to work. Then, tellingly, he reveals that the real game plan here is that if they do return, Republicans might be able to use a procedural move to move forward with their proposal. “If they’re actually in session for that day and they take a recess, this 19 Senate Republicans could then go into action and they’d have a quorum because they started out that way,” he says. “If you heard that I was going to talk to them that would be the only reason why.” Then the fake Koch says this: “Bring a baseball bat. That’s what I’d do.” Walker doesn’t bat an eye, and responds: “I have one in my office, you’d be happy with that. I’ve got a slugger with my name on it.” 12:09 p.m.: Another key exchange: FAKE KOCH: What we were thinking about the crowds was, planting some troublemakers. WALKER: We thought about that. My only gut reaction to that would be, right now, the lawmakers I talk to have just completely had it with them. The public is not really fond of this.The teachers union did some polling and focus groups… It’s unclear what Walker means when he says he “thought” about planting some troublemakers, but it seems fair to ask him for clarification. Indeed, it was amusing watching Walker try to lie his way past the gaffe. Amusing, that is, except for the subsequent eagerness of the mainstream press to help him cover it all up. UPDATE: John Amato: Even the Washington Post bought into the ACORN atrocity video perpetrated by O’Keefe; their ombudsman, Andrew Alexander, also wrote that it was a legitimate story and promised to take conservative pundits more seriously in the future: Wrongly Deaf to Right-Wing Media? It’s tempting to dismiss such gimmicks. Fox News, joined by right-leaning talk radio and bloggers, often hypes stories to apocalyptic proportions while casting competitors as too liberal or too lazy to report the truth. But they’re also occasionally pumping legitimate stories. I thought that was the case with ACORN and, before it, the Fox-fueled controversy that led to the resignation of White House environmental adviser Van Jones. With ACORN, The Post wrote about it two days after the first of several explosive hidden-camera videos were aired showing the group’s employees giving tax advice to young conservative activists posing as a prostitute and her pimp. Three days passed before The Post ran a short Associated Press story about the Senate halting Housing and Urban Development grants to ACORN, which operates in 110 cities. But by that time, the Census Bureau had severed ties with ACORN. State and city investigations had been launched. It wasn’t until late in the week that The Post weighed in with two solid pieces. Why the tardiness? One explanation may be that traditional news outlets like The Post simply don’t pay sufficient attention to conservative media or viewpoints. It “can’t be discounted,” said Tom Rosenstiel, director of the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism. “Complaints by conservatives are slower to be picked up by non-ideological media because there are not enough conservatives and too many liberals in most newsrooms.” I criticized Alexander for his insanity in with my 2009 piece: The Washington Post bows down to Conservatives! So as I watched the above segment from Reliable Sources yesterday, my blood began to boil because they make believe like their glowing coverage of the ACORN story previously never happened. Media Matters called Alexander out over his op-ed too: Post ombudsman adopts right-wing mantra that ACORN videos are a major story The Washington Post even falsely reported about the events that actually took place. You see, O’Keefe was never dressed up as a pimp when he went into ACORN’s offices, a point which drove the story on FOX, but the WaPo never bothered to correct its own error. To top it off, the Washington Post even promoted the phony Black Panthers story. Conservatives don’t only get help from Fox News and hate talk radio. They have the traditional media in their pockets too.
Continue reading …Imagine that Pat Robertson or Dr. James Dobson took out a full-page ad in a mainstream media publication hinting that Jesus himself is squarely behind the Republicans' efforts to curb spending and curtail the size and scope of the federal government. The media would certainly cover the interesting theological and political claims at hand but they'd also be certain to cite apolitical and/or liberal Christian thinkers who would decry the crass and cynical exploitation of Christ for political matters upon which Scripture is silent, such as the U.S. federal budget. Yet when it came to the liberal group Sojourners asking “What Would Jesus Cut” in an ad in today's Politico, CNN's Belief Blog failed to report the objections of concerns that conservative Christians and apolitical Christian theologians would raise From Dan Gilgoff's Feb. 28 CNN.com Belief Blog post (emphasis mine): A coalition of progressive Christian leaders has taken out a full-page ad that asks “What would Jesus cut?” in Monday’s edition of Politico, the opening salvo in what the leaders say will be a broader campaign to prevent cuts for the poor and international aid programs amid the budget battle raging in Washington.
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