Posts Tagged ‘Republican’

Has Our Honor Been Restored, Mr. Beck?

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

This was the big weekend for Glenn Beck, and allegedly, America. He went from the Kennedy Center Friday night to the Lincoln Memorial Saturday, on the anniversary of Martin Luther King’s “I have a Dream Speech.” That’s three murdered progressive heroes in two days. Is there a name for that sort of psychosis?

For months prior to the event Beck promised that it would be a turning point for America; that it would be an awakening; that miracles would happen. Well, unless a leper was healed in the reflecting pool off-camera, I must have missed the miracle. In fact, all I saw was a live, extended episode of the 700 Club with Glenn Beck as the guest host.

For the most part, Beck kept his promise to avoid politics. While there were a few indirect references to political issues, the bulk of the presentation focused overwhelmingly on Christian fundamentalism. It was an old-school revival meeting without a lick of originality wherein Beck announced that America is “turning back to God.” And although he promoted the event as one that would unite all faiths, there wasn’t a single representative from Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, or any other non-Christian sect. The only Jewish participant was a rabbi (and former associate of convicted felon, Jack Abramoff), who was introduced on stage but did not address the crowd.

Also on stage were numerous African Americans, mostly members of gospel choirs. I would venture to say that there were more African Americans on stage than amongst the tens of thousands in the audience.

The sermon Beck delivered was notable in that he defined 9/11 as “a wake up call” from God. That may come as a surprise to those who assumed terrorists from Al Qaeda were responsible. He also stressed that “America is at a crossroads” and that “we must advance or perish.” Beck courageously declared that he would choose to advance. I guess that should silence all those radicals who think we ought to perish instead. However, I wonder if advancing might not be a little too suggestive of the progressive course that Beck so feverishly abhors.

One of the most frequently expressed themes articulated by Beck was that we have been spending way too much time on what’s wrong with America and that it is now time “to concentrate on the good things in America, the things that we have accomplished – and the things that we can do tomorrow. That would be refreshing if Beck were able to sustain it for more than a heartbeat.

Ninety-five percent of show his about what’s wrong with America. He hates the government. He hates the people. He hates the Democrats. He hates health care and the environment and unions and churches and Social Security. To Beck we are a crumbling empire awash in debt, ruled by Marxists and estranged from God. And this guy is lecturing the rest of us about concentrating on the good things? A few days ago he expressed his thoughts on the future in a more foreboding tone that is common on his radio and TV programs:

“I’m begging you to get down on your knees. What is coming is not good. I don’t know how things end. I should rephrase that. I do know how things end. But I know how things end after a long struggle. I don’t know how that struggle is going to work out. I don’t know how much time each of us has. I don’t know how much time the country has.”

How does he expect his flock to concentrate on the good while he is advising them to liquidate their assets and hoard gold and guns? It will be interesting to see if Beck’s new-found evangelistic optimism can be maintained for even the next week of his broadcasts, or if his familiar doomsday fear-mongering will continue to dominate his message. Either way, I’m still waiting for evidence of his Miracle on the Mall. And for the record, my honor never needed restoration in the first place.

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GOP Reanimates Dead Reagan

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

Could an undead Ronald Reagan be the savior of the GOP???

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No Criticism Allowed, Apparently

Monday, May 31st, 2010

Our local paper, the Bluefield Daily Telegraph, loves them some right-wing columnists. Check out the alarmist crap below:

"One wonders if liberals believe there is any element of our lives that would not be better under government control. But imagine what a nightmare it will be if things devolve to the point where government chooses who can report news in a newspaper, or on radio, television or the Internet.

"Defeating this power grab depends upon the free flow of reliable information, which is a significant challenge, given the degree to which the mainstream media has abandoned its duty to produce balanced and accurate reporting to keep the citizenry well informed.

"Barack Obama believes there is too much information available to people and that they can’t tell the good from the bad. That’s insulting. The answer is more information, not less, and less information is what we’ll have with government management of the news."

Writer James "Smokey" Shott's entire column is here.

Now, as I've done probably 6 or 7 times before, after reading Smokey's latest rant I fired off a letter to the editor in response. Do you think it ever saw print? No.

The Bluefield Daily Telegraph seems to be very selective which letters to the editor they choose to print. If it's from a conservative reader, it sees publication. If it's from anyone who leans to the left, forget it.

Here is my unprinted letter to the editor, written in response to Shott's column referenced above:

Leave it to a right-wing pundit to dream up a conspiracy by the Obama administration where there is none.

In a Tuesday, May 25 opinion column published in the Bluefield Daily Telegraph, the writer, referring to a "left wing" report titled New Public Media: A Plan for Action, said, "See how it works? First, the government took certain steps that helped newspapers and later helped broadcasting. But then it formed public broadcasting networks, and now there’s the suggestion it take control of the news media by making it a public entity."

There is no such suggestion in the report. What it actually states is that public broadcast networks should play more of a role in reporting community news. The bugaboo of government control in public broadcasting is nonexistent, and indeed laughable.

In public opinion surveys, public broadcasting consistently ranks ahead of the military, the courts and Congress in terms of public trust and is considered to be one of the best uses of taxpayer dollars year after year. Public broadcasting maintains this status despite partisan pressure from Washington, coming from both sides of the aisle.

The authors of the report seek additional funding for public media, and yes, they mention turning to the government for help. Does this equate government control? Hardly. What they envision is a network that "could engage with their audiences in more meaningful ways — covering important local events, opening their doors to collaborate with a wide range of media producers and community institutions, and encouraging public dialogue and debate."

How anyone can see this vision of a media with no agenda of its own, or loyalty to any party, as a government conspiracy is beyond me. Do we currently see "government controlled" content on our existing public networks – NPR, PBS, others?

The title of the report’s opening section, Crisis and Opportunity, is given sinister connotations due to a philosophy supposedly espoused by White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel: “Never let a serious crisis go to waste.” The column's writer then throws in, "And if there isn’t a convenient crisis afoot, make one up."

So, we are apparently supposed to believe that the sinister administration is actively pursuing a plan to take over the news media, based on some pretty flimsy (actually nonexistent) evidence and a vague similarity between a title in the report in question, and a remark made by Emanuel. While we're at it, why not believe the government is responsible for the state of today's news media? It's all part of the plan, you know!

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Oops! National Enquirer Backpedals on Obama “Scandal” Story

Friday, May 7th, 2010

No one’s going to ignore the National Enquirer’s reporting on political sex scandals. It is at the height of its prestige now, having been talked about as a serious Pulitzer Prize contender for its coverage of the John Edwards scandal.

The tabloid has cred.  (Well, until now it did)  And some conservatives and anti-Obama liberals are complaining about the media’s refusal to “cover” the Enquirer’s web splashes about then-Senate candidate Obama’s alleged extramarital affair with a finance staffer, Vera Baker. The lead reads: “PRESIDENT OBAMA in a shocking cheating scandal after being caught in a D.C. hotel with a former campaign aide.”

 Is the media covering for Obama? Are they too afraid to ask the question, fearing ridicule from their peers?

Whatever collective motivations may be operating on this story, there is a simpler explanation for the lack of coverage: the story has no legs. It doesn’t even have thighs. It is, as Slate’s John Dickerson said, an “investigation about an alleged rumor,” but we don’t know who is doing the investigating and what precisely ought to be investigated.

Also, when this rumor came up during the campaign, mainstream news organizations did investigate, and found that there was no evidence to support the charge. There are no new developments to speak of, and the Enquirer has already revised its claim about “an alleged surveillance tape.” Says the Enquirer: “Now, the investigators are searching for a hotel surveillance videotape”.

Investigators? That implies something criminal. No, no. We learn that these investigators are “top anti-Obama operatives” who are offering a million dollars for solid evidence.

This “affair” is destined to become a white whale for right-wing haters and nutcases who have no other impulse than to bring down a president they “know” in their hearts is illegitimate. It’s the birth certificate, all over again.

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Repeal Healthcare? Keep Dreaming, GOP

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

The continued Republican outrage at the Democrat’s newly passed healthcare reform bill demonstrates two things: that the GOP was planning on the 2010 midterms being an electoral victory lap and that civics education is woefully lacking in the country’s conservative party.

It seems abundantly clear that repealing and resisting healthcare reform will be the GOP’s signature issue for 2010.  The ink is not yet dry on the nation’s new Healthcare Policy and Republicans are already geared up for a grand march towards its repeal. Senator Jim DeMint has  introduced a bill to the Senate to strike the measure which, just hours after the President signed the Senate bill into law, is  festooned with a gaggle of co-sponsors including, as Eugene Kiely of USA Today informs us, “Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Robert Bennett of Utah, Kit Bond of Missouri, Saxby Chambliss of Georgia, Mike Crapo of Idaho, John Ensign of Nevada, Kay Bailey Hutchinson of Texas, James Inhofe of Oklahoma, George LeMieux of Florida, James Risch of Idaho, Pat Roberts of Kansas and David Vitter of Louisiana.”

Meanwhile Mitch McConnell is pledging that the Republican slogan will be “Repeal and Replace” and, in the lower House, Michele Bachmann has taken it upon herself to introduce a short bit of legislation paralleling Senator DeMint’s.

Which brings us to the matter of civics education.  As any High School Senior can tell you, the Republicans can’t overturn this law, not in 2010 anyway.

This isn’t a political prognostication; it’s math.

Overturning a law is no different than passing any other piece of legislation.  The bill must make its way through both houses of Congress and across the President’s desk.  As Democrats learned after the Republican Revolution of 1994, however, the President’s veto is not an insurmountable obstacle; a two-thirds majority of both houses of Congress can pass a bill over the objections of the White House.  Needless to say, President Obama will oppose – staunchly – the repeal of his most significant domestic policy victory.  Thus, if Republicans want to overturn healthcare reform, they will have to do so over the President’s veto and that will require two thirds of both Houses.

Two thirds of the House of Representatives is 290 votes; to reach that number Republicans will have to defend their existing 177 seats and win an addition 113 more, mostly from Democratic incumbents.  Such an electoral victory is improbable but not impossible.  Chalk one up for the audacity of obstructionism.

Two thirds of the Senate, however, is 67 votes.  The election of Senator Scott Brown put the GOP at 41 seats in the United States’ Senate which means that the GOP must win an additional 26 seats from the Democrats in the 2010 race.  This is not just improbable; it is impossible: only 18 Democratic seats are up for grabs in the 2010 race.  Even assuming a complete electoral sweep, the Republicans can – at most – hope to hold 59 seats in the 112th Congress’ Senate.

Yet, after a year of doomsaying and predictions of veritable apocalypse should Health Care Reform pass, the Republicans can not simply abandon the issue on the campaign trail and they certainly can’t stump on a message of impotent incompetence.  Increasingly desperate attempts to look at all relevant in the political arena have lead nearly more than a dozen Republican state-attorneys general  to bring suit challenging the constitutionality of the bill and pledges of resistance from several more.  Zach Wamp, a candidate for Governor in Tennessee, promised to meet the federal government “at the state line,” while Virginia’s Governor Bob McDonnell signed legislation declaring that Virginians are not required to purchase health insurance.

Clearly civics education is lacking at the state level as well.

The lawsuits challenging the Constitutionality of Health Care Reform focus on the law’s mandate which requires Americans to hold a health insurance policy or face a tax penalty.  Critics charge that such a measure is outside the bounds of the Commerce Clause of the US Constitution, the section of Article I that gives the Congress the power to regulate commerce between the states.  “We contend that if a person decides not to buy health insurance, that person – by definition – is not engaging in commerce,” Cuccinelli said, “and therefore, is not subject to a federal mandate.”  Legal scholars are divided on what the Court’s likely decision will be but even should the Court strike down the mandate provision that is all it can do; the rest of the law – unchallenged by any lawsuit – will stand and the result could destroy the health insurance market.

Pledges to resist the law at the state level are no better informed.  State laws which directly contradict the recently passed Federal one are overruled by it per centuries old Supreme Court precedent set in McCulloch v Maryland and pledges of less legislative resistance like that alluded to by Zach Wamp have historically ended badly; don’t take my word for it, ask Jefferson Davis how that worked out for him.

All of this is more than a little absurd, childish, and petulant yet the Republicans really have no choice in the matter.  The GOP bet the house, as former Bush speechwriter David Frum wrote, on “hysterical accusations and pseudo-information” and as a result of that they have convinced their base that Health Care Reform is the gravest danger facing America today.  Conservative radio host Neil Bortz even went so far as to charge that “[health care reform] will do more damage than 9/11.”  The resulting ideological meltdown suffered by the GOP in the wake of Health Care Reform lead Frum to conclude that “Republicans originally thought that Fox worked for us and now we’re discovering we work for Fox… [the] balance here has been completely reversed. The thing that sustains a strong Fox network is the thing that undermines a strong Republican party.”

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The Single Best Reason to Pass Health Care Reform

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

A recent comment on Obamacare from Rush Limpbloat:

"I don't know. I'll just tell you this, if this passes and it's five years from now and all that stuff gets implemented — I am leaving the country. I'll go to Costa Rica."

You hear that, guys? Health-care reform will not only cover 30 million Americans and reduce the deficit, but it'll also get rid of Rush Limbaugh! This is, like, the best bill ever!

Unfortunately, it turns out that Rush was merely referring to seeking medical care outside the U.S. Which is still pretty funny, since the country he chose, Costa Rica, has a universal health care system… you know, the kind he doesn't want to see in this country.

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Orly Taitz: Dangerous Nutcase

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

If you've never heard of Orly Taitz, she's the queen of the "Birther" movement, which contends Barack Obama is not a U.S. citizen and therefore not eligible to serve as President of the United States.

Taitz has been laughed out of courtroom after courtroom as she doggedly pursues her so-called "case" against Obama. She's prime joke fodder, but a recent post on her blog indicates she might be a tad dangerous, too:

"What is the real intention of this Kenyan, Indonesian communist usurper? Is it to provide security for us or to destroy our security? Judge for yourself.

"Seeing targeted destruction of our economy, our security, dissipation of American jobs, massive corruption in the Government, Congress Department of Justice and Judiciary, it might be time to start rallies and protests using our second amendment right to bare arms and organise in militias."

Sounds like a call to arms to me…. and possibly to many others, in which Taitz's already bad year may just be an inkling of what's to come for her. Here's a rundown of her low points in 2009:

  • August 3: MSNBC's David Shuster calls out Taitz on live TV after she lashes out at "Obama's brownshirts" in the media. Said Shuster: "You're making a reference to Nazi Germany, and to a lot of us who lost relatives in the Holocaust, this is deeply, deeply offensive."
  • August 6: In a sign of an intra-Birther power struggle, fellow conspiracy theorist Andy Martin publicly declares it's time to "shut down the Orly Taitz circus."
  • Sept. 16: Federal Judge Clay Land, who is presiding over a Georgia Birther case, belittles Taitz in a widely circulated order that accuses Taitz of failing to understand legal principles grasped by "any middle school civics student." Land adds: "Unlike in Alice in Wonderland, simply saying something is so does not make it so."
  • Sept. 17: A fellow member of the California bar files a complaint in response to Taitz's call — during an interview with TPMmuckraker — for Judge Land to be tried for treason.
  • Sept. 21: Army Captain Connie Rhodes, Taitz's own client in the Georgia Birther case, sends a letter to the judge renouncing Taitz as her counsel. Rhodes, who sent the letter while deploying to Iraq, tells the judge that Taitz submitted an emergency filing without Rhodes' permission or blessing.
  • October 13: A frustrated Land fines Taitz $20,000 for repeated frivolous filings. "When a lawyer files complaints and motions without a reasonable basis for believing that they are supported by existing law or a modification or extension of existing law, that lawyer abuses her privilege to practice law," he writes. "When a lawyer abuses her privilege to practice law, that lawyer ceases to advance her cause or the ends of justice."
  • October 14: Appearing on Joy Behar's show, Taitz is forced to explain why she described the judge as "delusional":
  • November 12: An affidavit from a prospective witness in a California Birther case alleges that Taitz asked witnesses to perjure themselves — and much worse.

Anyone who supports this woman or her cause should be ashamed of themselves.

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Palin: No Need To Cry Over Her Decision

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

Sarah Palin’s decision to step down as governor of Alaska has the right shedding tears of disappointment and sorrow, and naturally the first thing they do is blame the big bad liberal media and the Godless liberal left wing loonies.

Time for a fact check, my right wing friends – politics is a dirty business and adherents of both parties have been guilty of gutterball tactics. Everyone’s favorite bellowing right wing pundit, Rush Limbaugh, once called Chelsea Clinton “a dog”. Hillary Clinton was, and continues to be, the butt of jokes regarding her husband’s dalliances, her own physical appearance, and even her sexual preferences. And let’s not forget the endless baseless accusations bandied about concerning Barack Obama’s citizenship, his “palling around with terrorists”, his patriotism and his religious persuasion.

Still, this type of nonsense is part and parcel of a prominent politician’s life. Countless leaders in our government have endured this, remained above the fray, kept their head held high, and continued to serve. By resigning her governorship, Mrs. Palin shows that she simply doesn’t have what it takes to play the game. This is a person who many see as a potential presidential candidate? Would we want a president who has shown a remarkable lack of fortitude in walking away from a job because the going got tough? Would President Palin decide to step down the first time her approval ratings dropped or one of her measures failed in Congress?

Many on the right are spinning her resignation as a smart move in preparation for a 2012 presidential run. Of course! The best way to show you’re presidential material is to quit.

Deep down, not even those spouting the spin really believe it.

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