Tampa Bay eliminated, Yankees and Baltimore tied for first/wild card, and the season is in its last week.
It's baseball, guys.
"My hovercraft is full of eels." Political (Monty) Pythonist and baseball fanatic. Other matters as inappropriate.
Sunday, September 30, 2012
Saturday, September 29, 2012
Why I Call It Republican Satanic Panic
Via Mercury Rising, Truthout reports on actual voter fraud. Now, don't be surprised.
Mmmmmm-hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
And, earlier this year, in 2012, the Sacramento Republican Party was found to have hired Momentum Political Services, a firm headed up by a woman described as a "professional con-artist". The group allegedly turned in thousands of fraudulent voter registrations as part of a $50,000 bounty scheme seeking Republican registrations, as paid for by the GOP in the district of Republican Congressman Dan Lungren.Brad Friedman, author of this article, has an earlier story on higher-level fraud.
All the while, Republicans were loudly accusing Democrats of committing "voter fraud" requiring polling place Photo ID restrictions to stop it, even though there are just 10 known cases of in-person impersonation --- the only type of voter fraud that can possibly be deterred by Photo ID --- out of hundreds of millions of votes cast in all 50 states since 2000, according to a recent exhaustive report by the non-partisan investigative news consortium, News21.
Mmmmmm-hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Mr. Scalzi's Homework for US Voters
It’s important that you make sure you are registered to vote and that you know the laws of your state regarding what you need to identify yourself when you come in to vote (here’s what you need for the state of Ohio, for example). The longer you put this off, the more chance you have to be unpleasantly surprised by requirements you did not know about.I'm Onyx Lynx, and I approve Mr. Scalzi's message.
Yes, there’s an entire conversation to have about “voter fraud” and laws being passed to “combat” it, and yes, those scare quotes are there for a very good reason. However, that’s an argument to have some other time. Right now, what I want you to focus on as as a prospective voter is this: Don’t be surprised, do know what hoops your state is going to make you jump through on election day, and jump through those hoops. Don’t go to the polls unaware.
(Driftglass has a pic of Harlan Ellison with a Photoshopped beard. Surprisingly handsome.)
47% Is Lowballing
More like 96%. Because some government aid is disguised.
In other words, a lot of Republicans get benefits and then live in denial. Not surprising, really. It’s the same reason that a lot of Republicans use contraception, but nonetheless think that it’s just fine and dandy to claim Sandra Fluke is the Biggest Ho Ever because she uses contraception.P.S. Libertarians, too.
Fun With Plutocracy
Austerity, Greeks, the general strike, and suicide.
Austerity is killing Greece’s economy, and taking Greek citizens down with it. Forty percent of Greece’s GDP comes from the public sector — represented by the workers going on strike this week. Cuts to the public sector must eventually impact the private sector negatively, as more people are out of work, and can’t or don’t pay bills.Terrance of Republic of T reports.
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Turning, Spinning, Catherine-Wheeling
Southern Beale over at First Draft notes the peculiar parameters that Mr. Romney must operate within and the nature of conservatism:
Also in the Slow Death of Newspapers, Maariv is in bad shape.
Isn't that just typical? Whenever reality contradicts conservative ideology, it's always the reality that's wrong, and the conservative solution is always to create their own version of whatever so-called "liberal" thing vexes them at the moment. It must be exhausting creating your own alternate reality: your own news network, your own Bible, your own science and history, and on, and on. Expensive, too. But there you have it.Conservapedia doesn't get mentioned, but it was my first thought.
[...]
Anything deemed "liberal" by conservatives now has its right-wing counterpart, catering exclusively to right-wingers. The results have been predictable: a core group of intractable true believers increasingly cut off from the rest of the electorate.
Also in the Slow Death of Newspapers, Maariv is in bad shape.
Monday, September 24, 2012
Remember 2004?
It's not just voter suppression/intimidation; Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman question electronic voting and unverifiable results:
Would this batch of swing state Republicans do that for Romney.The Smirking Chimp, sounding a warning. Also, they're fundraising, so if you have spare cash, you might want to slip them some.
We don’t know.
COULD they do it?
Absolutely.
Would you be able to find definitive, legally admissable proof that they did it?
No.
Would the courts overturn such a tainted victory?
Not likely.
What could ultimately be done about it?
In the short term: ....nothing.
In the long-term, only a bottom-up remaking of how we cast and count ballots ballots can guarantee this nation anything resembling a true democracy. It is, to put it mildly, a reality worth fighting for.
Indisputably Disreputable History
- I believe the group True the Vote was mentioned previously--this is who they are and what they do. Voter suppression/intimidation has a long history:
Conservative anti–voter fraud fervor first arose around the same time as two turning points in American politics. The first was John F. Kennedy’s narrow presidential win in 1960, which many Republicans attributed to voter fraud in Illinois and Texas. The second was the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the 1965 Voting Rights Act, which, by banning discriminatory voting practices, stoked fear in some quarters about the rising power of black voters. During the run-up to the 1964 presidential election, the Republican National Committee launched Operation Eagle Eye, the nation’s first large-scale anti–voter fraud campaign. As part of the program, the RNC recruited tens of thousands of volunteers to show up at polling places, mostly in inner cites, and challenge voters’ eligibility using a host of tools and tactics, including cameras, two-way radios, and calls to Republican-friendly sheriffs.
- Mr. Coates has a post, mostly referring to the article excerpted above, but referring to Lincoln's assassin.
Sunday, September 23, 2012
Run in the Shadows
- Job creation--Democrats are better at it, according to this article.
- I seem to have missed the sesquicentennial of the Emancipation Proclamation (150 years ago! Who'dathunkit?), but Doctor Science at Obsidian Wings didn't. And I didn't know that Lincoln approved a code of war!
- Via Mercury Rising, Richard Wolff's article on faulting government for the mistakes of capital.
- The former owner of the Pittsburgh Pirates came out.
- Kansas City is out of contention.
Saturday, September 22, 2012
Speaking of the Election
The NY Times has discovered voter harassment, then and now.
In The Times on Monday, Stephanie Saul described how the plan works. True the Vote grew out of a Tea Party group in Texas, the King Street Patriots, with the assistance of Americans for Prosperity, a group founded by the Koch brothers that works to elect conservative Republicans. It has developed its own software to check voter registration lists against driver’s license and property records. Those kinds of database matches are notoriously unreliable because names and addresses are often slightly different in various databases, but the group uses this technique to challenge more voters.Also, Sarah Silverman has a video encouraging getting necessary ID. In, of course, her own inimitable style. Not safe for work, around conservatives, or people who don't like her humor.
Why American Women Should Vote
Couple of turns through websites (I think I started with The Sideshow, but it turns out that I actually bookmarked the Guardian [aka the Grauniad] a while back) brought me to this editorial/commentary in the Guardian laying out reasons that the votes of women in the US elections this year are important.
Republican Satanic panic "voter fraud" as the excuse) it makes sense to a) MAKE SURE YOU CAN VOTE and b) VOTE. No, I don't want to hear about how boring it is. No, I don't want to hear about how all the candidates are alike. You're an adult. Deal.
This year, though, Belle's exhortations to her friends have become less about simply exercising the right to suffrage and more about preserving other hard-won rights. She believes that regardless of who they vote for, all women should vote – but, she tells her friends, we should vote for the party that will do most for women. There's a great deal to be done to ensure that women have all the same opportunities as men, and she knows that the Republicans won't do it.What with all the disenfranchisement efforts going around (see the label "You don't want me to vote." [which I need to relabel, stupid Blogger] for instances of attempts to suppress the electorate, using
Friday, September 21, 2012
And Then...
Driftglass takes Ted Koppel to the woodshed task for the failure of mainstream media. With bonus Hunter S. Thompson.
Also, one gets more "positive" results when drug companies sponsor trials of their product than when, say, the government sponsors those trials. (Gee...wonder why?)
ETA: The two parts of the Great Depression. Witness and researcher.
Also, one gets more "positive" results when drug companies sponsor trials of their product than when, say, the government sponsors those trials. (Gee...wonder why?)
ETA: The two parts of the Great Depression. Witness and researcher.
I Read the News Today, Oh Boy
- Washington clinched! (Playoff berth so far.) Those of you of a certain age remember when the Nats (which used to be short for "Senators" and is now short for "Nationals") would be considered lucky to be out of last place. They wouldn't have a young phenom named Joe Hardy on the team, would they? (Apparently not, but they do have Kurt Suzuki and Gio Gonzalez.)
The last time the Washington team went to the post season (they didn't have playoffs unless there was a tie for first back then) was 1933. - Naked Capitalism publishes Project S.H.A.M.E.'s exposé of Megan McArdle as a stealth
libertarianconservative writer. (Project S.H.A.M.E.'s investigations of other media lights are here.) Mercury Rising links and has short quotes. - Street preachers on a university campus.
This generation wants to hear the rest of the biblical message, that faith without works is dead, do not look down on anybody, the only thing that matters is faith expressing itself through love, judgment is based on how you treat the most needy people.
These things, the heart of Christian living it seems to me, have not been traditionally emphasized. Instead it's like, "Repent, adopt Victorian Era sexual norms and be saved from hell!" That's not a particularly appealing message. Don't get me wrong, our culture's sexual norms are sinful. But we should not expect people who do not accept, or necessarily understand, the Gospel message to abide by Christian moral standards. Why should they? There are good reasons I waited to have sex until I got married. But we cannot make sense of that choice, which looks so silly on the surface, until we've explored all the more important stuff from which it stems: the grace of God, faith expressing itself in love, caring for the needy, etc. - Foreclosure is taking too long, so fees are getting imposed on some mortgages.
- Conservative Conor Friedersdorf diagnoses the right wing:
The right needs to value robust argument more highly. And to denigrate those who subvert it more forcefully. For public discourse is all it has to test ideas and formulate an evolving agenda.
[I removed a pair of names tht do not sully my space voluntarily.]
If Hugh Hewitt and Dennis Prager reflect on why they conduct themselves with more integrity [...], even though they needn't do so to succeed in talk radio; if the most intellectually honest scholars at the American Enterprise Institute and the Heritage Foundation think about why they hold themselves to a higher standard than the most hackish of their colleagues; if all the people who know better reflect on the reasons for their own behavior, they'd perhaps better appreciate why it is vital to stop staying silent when prominent co-ideologues fall short of the most minimal standards. - Republic of T picks up some more reactions to Mr. Romney's remarks.
- Voting Expert (from Brookings Institute) explains extreme rarity of
Republican Satanic panicvoter fraud to Faux News host Shepard Smith. Mr. Smith is still sitting on the floor with fingers in his ears screaming "Lalalalala I can't hear you.." - A different reaction to Mr. Romney's remarks.
Thursday, September 20, 2012
Not Going to the Dance
Toronto, Milwaukee, Pittsburgh, and San Diego get to watch the post season from their well-appointed homes.
Also, Cincinnati Reds have clinched!
Also, Cincinnati Reds have clinched!
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Other Vices, Other Grooms
- Via The Sideshow, Chris Hedges:
Last week, round one in the battle to strike down the onerous provision [§1021(b)(2) of the NDAA], one that saw me joined by six other plaintiffs including Noam Chomsky and Daniel Ellsberg, ended in an unqualified victory for the public. U.S. District Judge Katherine Forrest, who accepted every one of our challenges to the law, made her temporary injunction of the section permanent. In short, she declared the law unconstitutional.
- Also via The Sideshow, Mark Karlin interviews Greg Palast on the upcoming election heist in which the Democrats are apparently accomplices before the fact.
- Speaking of election heists, Minnesota Republicans are preparing to panic:
It apparently doesn’t faze Minnesota Republicans one bit when it’s pointed out that the ALEC-inspired "Voter ID" amendment legislation — legislation which by the way won’t stop the sort of voter fraud Republicans say it was meant to stop — will make it harder for many nonwhite Minnesotans to vote. For the leaders of the Grand Old Party, which has used the Southern Strategy as its operational platform for so long its members have forgot they were once the Party of Lincoln, Jim Crow racism isn’t a bug but a feature — they figure that the more their fan base hears this, the better.
Phoenix Woman at -- yes -- Daily Kos, via Mercury Rising. (Bluestem Prairie has done a lot to expose the financial aspect of
But when the fact that it stands to ruin the budgets of dozens of Minnesota counties gets publicly aired by a growing number of local media outlets, that’s when the Republicans get worried.Republican Satanic panicvoter ID.) - Oh, by the way...the IRS has apparently been ignoring violations of its own rules. (As always, double underlines=ads. It's naked capitalism, yo.)
- Jesse Curtis doesn't like arrogance.
- Enough bake sales were conducted to film Atlas Shrugged II: The Indifference. It opens Columbus Day. Also opening that day: Something called Seven Psychopaths. With Christopher Walken. No contest.
- What, isn't that enough?
- ETA: Mr. Romney is not showing his competent side, is he? Also, I know Hollywood had a hard time giving up the Russian villain character, but this is ridiculous.
While Mr. Romney Dines on Shoe Sandwich
...let's have a look at a graph and figures detailing this "pay no taxes" deal.
The first thing one notices is that sizable chunk of "Paid payroll taxes." That would be what we call "withholding." For the benefit of Mr. Romney: That means that the money is deducted from the paycheck and sent to the IRS by the employer, who then issues the lovely W-2 form showing how much was paid. One then communes with one of the 1040 family of tax return forms to determine the amount actually owed. On occasion money has been over-withheld, and those people are sent the excess as a refund. (Occasionally, money is under-withheld, and these people must send a check covering the amount, but I doubt Mr. Romney counts them because not for the full amount.) This is a system meant to be as painless as possible. They are still paying Federal (and probably state) tax. They're working and middle class people, and frankly, they've worked harder than Mr. Romney ever will.
Elderly, ie recipients of Social Security, are not taxed unless they make over an amount determined by law. They've also put many years' worth of earnings into the system. People who make less than a certain amount (in the graph and figures, $20,000, but there's the standard deduction and exemptions to take into account) do not have to pay, although they have to file.
The less-than-1% (funny, that) not otherwise accounted for would seem to include...millionaires.
The first thing one notices is that sizable chunk of "Paid payroll taxes." That would be what we call "withholding." For the benefit of Mr. Romney: That means that the money is deducted from the paycheck and sent to the IRS by the employer, who then issues the lovely W-2 form showing how much was paid. One then communes with one of the 1040 family of tax return forms to determine the amount actually owed. On occasion money has been over-withheld, and those people are sent the excess as a refund. (Occasionally, money is under-withheld, and these people must send a check covering the amount, but I doubt Mr. Romney counts them because not for the full amount.) This is a system meant to be as painless as possible. They are still paying Federal (and probably state) tax. They're working and middle class people, and frankly, they've worked harder than Mr. Romney ever will.
Elderly, ie recipients of Social Security, are not taxed unless they make over an amount determined by law. They've also put many years' worth of earnings into the system. People who make less than a certain amount (in the graph and figures, $20,000, but there's the standard deduction and exemptions to take into account) do not have to pay, although they have to file.
The less-than-1% (funny, that) not otherwise accounted for would seem to include...millionaires.
But it isn’t just low-income households that pay no federal income taxes, Williams said. He estimated that 1,400 millionaires didn’t pay federal income taxes in 2009, with many likely taking advantage of foreign tax credits or charitable donations to lower their tax liability.In other words, Mr. Romney should have queried his figures before slinging numbers around.
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
Housekeeping
I have moved several inactive blogs to the "Archived" list and deleted a couple which had reverted to "Your Website Here!"
Orcinus has not been dormant for the full year, but I doubt very much that there will be new entries there.
Orcinus has not been dormant for the full year, but I doubt very much that there will be new entries there.
Monday, September 17, 2012
Two Lovely Ladies
- Tomorrow is June Foray's 95th birthday. Hokey Smoke!
- I always forget that Rita Hayworth was a dancer. This video contains clips from her movies to the tune os "Stayin' Alive." I'm going to watch it again.
(Mark Evanier has interesting stuff, and not just about comics.)
The Fuschia
- Two more counties in Minnesota realize the effects of
Republican Satanic panicthe voter ID law. You'd almost think that was the intended outcome. From Mercury Rising. - On the energy front:
- liberal japonicus (Obsidian Wings) links to an article in the Atlantic on alternative (renewable) energy sources and ARPA-E.
So far, more than a dozen ARPA-E-funded companies have already attracted follow-up venture funding. They're very excited about 1366 Technologies, which has developed a new solar manufacturing process. Basically, instead of slicing silicon ingots like salami, which is a difficult way to make wafers and wastes a lot of silicon dust, they're creating the wafers directly from liquid silicon like pancakes, which could cut the price of solar panels by a third. The other big winner so far is Envia Systems, which has developed the world's most powerful lithium-ion battery; it could slice $5000 off the cost of the second-generation Chevy Volt. But there are all kinds of exciting projects: lithium-air batteries that could put lithium-ion out to pasture someday, wind turbines shaped like jet engines, electric transformers the size of a suitcase instead of a kitchen, laser drilling technology that could cut costs of geothermal wells as well as petroleum wells. We'll see what pans out.
- Also from Mercury Rising, an intriguing link to an L.A. Times article on a possible new solar medium (I have exceeded my article limit at the L.A. Times, so I can't go directly).
- liberal japonicus (Obsidian Wings) links to an article in the Atlantic on alternative (renewable) energy sources and ARPA-E.
- ETA: Tiger Beatdown's s.e. smith on Tea Party actions in Massachusetts and other attempts to suppress the vote.
That Wage Thing
Is
- Bogus.
- Not caused by cheap Chinese labor.
Despite the fact that this trend is well under way, we’re certain to hear a steady diet of haranguing from neoliberal economists about how American workers have to suck it up and accept even lower wages. What’s driving falling real wages is poor domestic economic policies, namely, the mismanagement of the post crisis period. Japan warned the US early on that the biggest mistake it had made was not forcing its banks to recognize losses. But we ignored their lesson and are in the process of suffering what may turn out to be a lost decade. Time to blame the real perps, our bank enablers, rather than the poster bad guy, the Chinese wage slave.
Sunday, September 16, 2012
Saturday, September 15, 2012
Oh, And...
Southern Beale looks at the New York Times' coverage of Republican Satanic panic the issue of whether or not there exists voter fraud.
Oh, really? Would someone like to tell what the core issue is, then? One side says voter fraud is a big problem, and the facts say that it is not. Meanwhile, one side is passing laws that take the Constitutionally-protected right to vote away from millions of people. That isn’t the core issue?
As the Season Dwindles...
Cleveland, Minnesota, and Colorado have been eliminated from the divisional races.
We're a long way from the '90s.
We're a long way from the '90s.
A Little Late, But
Cerberus at Sadly, No! reviews a review of the Republican National Con by a conservative. With "Shorter," wit, and the following sentence:
Cause yeah, arguing that Barack Obama isn’t allowed to campaign against your candidate really is the only hope the Republican Party has left at this point.
Topiary Animals
For your consideration:
- While perusing Brilliant at Breakfast, I followed a link leading to Tom Degan's The Rant, which celebrated the 50th anniversary of the Beatles' first studio session. That reminded me of my own poor story (hearing their first song, unidentified, on Radio Luxembourg), which in turn brought memories of the other two songs I remember hearing, one of which was equally mysterious and was not resolved by the band coming to the US with the rest of their output. So I googled, and lo! it turns out that the songwriters were quite prolific and well-known. The song was "Poof" by Kenny Lynch. So now I know.
- Via skippy, more misogyny from Joe Walsh. No, not that one (a point also made at the linked article. Joe [the real one] might want to talk to his publicist).
- "School choice" is "vouchers" by another name:
When given a clear choice, voters across the United States have consistently opposed school vouchers. Between 1966 and 2000, state ballot initiatives to allow public funding for private schools were rejected 24 out of 25 times. This dismal record led the pro-voucher strategists to rebrand the movement as “school choice” and as beneficial to public schools. In 2002, Dick DeVos suggested to a Heritage Foundation audience that the school choice movement should conceal its conservative roots. He advised that “properly communicated, properly constructed, [school choice] can cut across a lot of historic boundaries, be they partisan, ethnic, or otherwise.”
(Article found via an old post of mine linking to a progressive blog which had this article on a sidebar. Is serendipity not wonderful?)
- Robert Reich last week had an opinion piece at SFGate.com which apparently I didn't catch. It's about how the Republican falsehood machinery works:
The answer is that the Republican Party has developed three means of bypassing the mainstream media and its fact-checkers.
The first is by repeating big lies so often in TV spots - financed by a mountain of campaign money - that the public can no longer recall (if it ever knew) that the mainstream media and its fact-checkers have disproven them.
[...]
The second means the GOP has developed to protect its mistruths is discrediting the mainstream media - asserting that it's run by "liberal elites" who can't be trusted to tell the truth. "I am tired of the elite media protecting Barack Obama by attacking Republicans," Newt Gingrich charged at a Republican debate in January in what has become a standard GOP attack line.
[...]
The third means the GOP uses to protect itself is its own media outlets - led by Fox News, Rush Limbaugh and his yell-radio imitators, book publisher Regnery and the editorial page of the Wall Street Journal, along with a right-wing blogosphere. Even if these outlets don't spread the lies directly, they can at least spread doubt about what's true.
Together, these three mechanisms are creating a parallel Republican universe of Orwellian dimensions, where anything can be asserted, where pollsters and political advisers are free to create whatever concoction of lies will help elect their candidate and where "fact-checkers" are as irrelevant and intrusive as is the truth.
[...]
The Romney campaign has decided it won't be dictated by fact-checkers. But a society without trusted arbiters of what is true and what is false is vulnerable to every lie imaginable. - Better news: most of the anti-collective bargaining law championed by Scott Walker in Wisconsin has been struck down as violating both the state and US constitutions. Mr. Walker will appeal, of course.
- Who's afraid of
the Big Bad WolfOccupy Wall Street? NYPD. Checkpoints, Charlie.
Time to retreat to a nice scary Stephen King novel, where the horrors, though drawing from the subconscious, are only on the page.
Also, my baseball team won yesterday.
Thursday, September 13, 2012
Things of Note
- Teachers in Chicago are on strike. Skippy cites Erik Loomis of Lawyers, Guns & Money and his own experience to urge supporting the teachers in this action. I know I mentioned being put off math by a teacher in 2nd grade, but I was also encouraged by several teachers all the way through K-12. You do know that teachers don't get paid well, and are in certain circles expected to do the job out of love, right? SUPPORT CHICAGO TEACHERS!!!!!
- Backstage at Security Theater.
I really don’t want to hear how much shinier/sparklier/cheaper/better private contractors are. I also don’t want to hear about the budget deficit from phony fiscal hawks who are pocketing tens of thousands of dollars in campaign donations from these private companies. And finally, I don’t feel good knowing that our nuclear weapons programs are being handled by private, for-profit corporations. This is atrocious. If I were King I’d make this shit illegal.
- What newspapers and Major League Baseball have in common. (Also known as "Water won't flow uphill no matter how you order it to, King Canute.") (Psst! Boston and Philly slated for elimination soon! Like, this weekend.)
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
"Worst Voter Snipe Hunt Ever."
Jesse Taylor recounts the Great Republican Satanic panic Voter Fraud Investigation in Florida. Set down that drink.
And Did I Mention Minnesota's Voter ID Law?
Phoenixwoman at Mercury Rising notes that the Minneapolis Star-Tribune has belatedly noticed that implementing Republican Satanic panic voter ID is going to be a document and fiscal disaster. Links to previous mentions of this problem included.
Monday, September 10, 2012
Ziggy Played Guitar
...but where were the Spiders?
Probably consoling the New York Mets, who've been eliminated. Four National League teams mathematically eliminated. No American League teams. Yet. (Give it a week.)
Jesse Curtis has completed the week of conservative-only news and he Has Questions. (You should read it.)
Pecunium is hitting on all cylinders today: "Mitt Romney is a Liar," which is self-explanatory, and "Won't Ask, Don't Care," on the first year after the repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell.
Chris Hedges, via Mills River Progressive, says we can't grow our way out of this. Uh-oh!
Probably consoling the New York Mets, who've been eliminated. Four National League teams mathematically eliminated. No American League teams. Yet. (Give it a week.)
Jesse Curtis has completed the week of conservative-only news and he Has Questions. (You should read it.)
Pecunium is hitting on all cylinders today: "Mitt Romney is a Liar," which is self-explanatory, and "Won't Ask, Don't Care," on the first year after the repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell.
Chris Hedges, via Mills River Progressive, says we can't grow our way out of this. Uh-oh!
Sunday, September 9, 2012
Baseball and Greens
Chicago Cubs and Miami have been eliminated from contention in their respective division races. Wait til next year, anyone?
Philly.com has an interview with Jill Stein (via Corrente). On third parties, Ms. Stein says:
Philly.com has an interview with Jill Stein (via Corrente). On third parties, Ms. Stein says:
Any time that a big national party has moved forward, it's been a third party that drove it there. The abolition of slavery initially had the Liberty Party as the counterpart of the abolitionists' social movement. The Liberty Party drove the agenda into another small party which called itself the Republican Party. It was an independent party called the Women's Party that drove the issue of women's right to vote into the mainstream. If you like child labor laws, Social Security and collective bargaining, they were all pushed by small independent parties, including the socialists, the communists and others. They were a real force. Historically, there is a lot of evidence that you can win the day even if you don't win the office. As Frederick Douglass said: "Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will."
Eulogy for Journalism and a Little List
- Driftglass:
Once upon a time there used to be a profession that, at its best, brought exactly that kind of pressure to bear on powerful institutions that abused their positions of privilege to cheat the public and screw over its opponents. That profession was called "journalism" and people like David Gregory have killed it and until people like David Gregory learn to fear for their professional lives at the thought of using their positions of incredible influence and privilege to carry Conservative water and cover their crimes under an avalanche of Fake Centrist bullshit, the professional of journalism will remain dead.
- Question: Why do Republicans hate Americans? AlterNet's Erin Gloria Ryan wants to know!
According to people who have seen the thing in its entirety, it's the most conservative platform in modern history. Critics call it "angry," "fringe," and "extreme," as it calls for a constitutional amendment banning abortion in the case of rape, bars female soldiers from combat roles, blames sick people for requiring medical care, and officially declares gay marriage to be an abomination. In addition to being a policy compass — an indicator of what sort of laws we can expect from elected Republican officials over the next four years — the new platform is a giddy romp through all the reasons the grand ol' party might hate you.
Low-Tech Verifiable Voting
Lambert Strether at Naked Capitalism on paper ballots, hand-marked, hand-counted. It's the Quebec election system.
Saturday, September 8, 2012
Suspicious Circumstances
The death of Sunny Sheu and the aftermath of the story.
Hmmmmm (also, the comments paint several different stories).
While Galison’s contention above about a media coverup may sound a bit paranoid, he’s had repeated instances of initially interested media outlets pulling back from the story. Indeed, a writer at Business Insider indicated that he found the notion presented by the piece, that there is an ongoing coverup by the NYPD, and based on the information presented, he found that credible but his editors had doubts. Even so, Business Insider frequently publishes its own take on news and research; it could just as easily have picked up the story and posed the notion of a police coverup as a plausible rather than proven.From Naked Capitalism.
Hmmmmm (also, the comments paint several different stories).
Just in Case
Because I've heard absolutely nothing about the Green Party this year (remember the Green Party? They're still around), I'm linking to the Greens' 2012 presidential campaign site. Candidates are Jill Stein and Cheri Honkala.
Also, Chris Hedges advocates strong measures in an interview about his new book at AlterNet. (Actually at Truthout.org, reprinted by permission, but AlterNet's where I was directed by --. Um. This is why I need to post these things the day I see them.)
Also, Chris Hedges advocates strong measures in an interview about his new book at AlterNet. (Actually at Truthout.org, reprinted by permission, but AlterNet's where I was directed by --. Um. This is why I need to post these things the day I see them.)
Friday, September 7, 2012
Thursday, September 6, 2012
A Medley of Extemporanea
So the Democratic National Convention ends this evening and then I can concentrate on baseball (the stupid widget doesn't work this year, so I actually have to go to MLB.com, which is Entirely Too Much like going into a department store on December 23rd, what with all the videos and the stories about players and the various pronouncements, and that's not taking in team statistics and player statistics and past team statistics and retired player statistics and -- OK, OK. I really want one-stop standings like a newspaper page. How retro), since teams are falling by the wayside by now. Which is to say that at 42-95, Houston is giving the snowball in hell a run for its money. No one has clinched yet, though.
I'm going to have to add Naked Capitalism to the blogroll simply in self-defense; everybody else links to them. Mills River Progressive linked to this article by Ian Welsh, in which basic economic facts are set forth one by one. Time to call the Uh-oh! squad.
You think I'm kidding.
I have mentioned it twice before, but Minnesota's voter ID law is going to cost serious money (and of course will not stop non-existent voter fraud). Think of it as using stacks of money to swat the Red-Sequinned Blue-Booted Fly. Via Mercury Rising.
Southern Beale reports that hackers have allegedly broken into PricewaterhouseCoopers and stolennext year's Oscar winners Mr. Romney's tax returns, which they are holding for ransom. It's probably a hoax.
Obviously a bad case of lucroencephaly, or Money on the Brain...
I'm going to have to add Naked Capitalism to the blogroll simply in self-defense; everybody else links to them. Mills River Progressive linked to this article by Ian Welsh, in which basic economic facts are set forth one by one. Time to call the Uh-oh! squad.
You think I'm kidding.
I have mentioned it twice before, but Minnesota's voter ID law is going to cost serious money (and of course will not stop non-existent voter fraud). Think of it as using stacks of money to swat the Red-Sequinned Blue-Booted Fly. Via Mercury Rising.
Southern Beale reports that hackers have allegedly broken into PricewaterhouseCoopers and stolen
Obviously a bad case of lucroencephaly, or Money on the Brain...
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
On the Labor Front
Musicians of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra are not being paid and have been locked out. Via Iron Tongue at Midnight.
What?
What?
Short Shrift
Southern Beale, writing at First Draft, on that angry white men thing:
ETA because all the good stuff turns up after I hit Publish: Melissa McEwan on Values, featuring the "values" ad the Republicans are running.
Nobody is forcing anyone into a same-sex marriage (hey! Maybe that's their problem! No one is being forced to do it, so it must be Wrong!); I see no shotguns.
No, I still say the Angry White Men who comprise the bulk of the Republican Party are basically angry at their cultural irrelevance. They're angry their racist, homophobic, misogynist jokes aren't funny anymore. They're angry that the '60s happened, and then the '70s, and then the '90s happened, when Communism died and they no longer knew who to be angry at. They're angry they're unable to influence the culture at large, that no one even bothers to launch boycotts of their outspoken, angry musicians because when was the last time Hank Williams Jr. was relevant, anyway? The modern Republican Party has become so regional and parochial, Ohio's Republican candidate for U.S. Senate recently faked a Southern drawl at a Romney campaign event.They just need to dance more. [/dismissive]
This is how they ended up with Clint Eastwood talking to an empty chair which, as one Nashville blogger observed, was actually a step up from the bulk of the modern Republican Party. Hell, at least Eastwood was trying to have a conversation with President Obama.
ETA because all the good stuff turns up after I hit Publish: Melissa McEwan on Values, featuring the "values" ad the Republicans are running.
Despite their reflexive and compulsive intoning of the word "values" during every election year, as if it's a magical incantation that can be uttered only by those who understand its complex truth, it doesn't really mean anything, in and of itself. It's an ethically neutral word. Everyone has values. What matters is not that you have values, but what values you have. Joseph Stalin valued killing people. Jeffrey Dahmer valued eating people. George Bush valued torturing people. I value not killing people, not eating them, and not torturing them. See? Everyone has values.See, I value letting people make their own choice about what kind of relationships they want (some people don't actually want marriage, after all, and some people would like close ties with more than one other person. Yes, that's shocking. Deal), or as the limerick put it, "for what and with which and to whom." I get the impression that given the power, some conservatives would cheerfully institute arranged marriages. For them, it seems to be all about mating and breeding, and most people are not cattle. Right? Furthermore, insisting that the only good marriage is heterosexual means that the occasional LBGTQ person caught in that trap (family, social pressure, Republican busybodying) is going to end up miserable for however many years until getting the divorce.
Nobody is forcing anyone into a same-sex marriage (hey! Maybe that's their problem! No one is being forced to do it, so it must be Wrong!); I see no shotguns.
Monday, September 3, 2012
No. They Don't.
Apparently Andrew Cohen at the Atlantic has been investigating the national vote suppression scheme.
A few days ago there was a long article about South Carolina's Marci Andino, the executive director of the state's Election Commission, whose testimony in federal court exposes the mechanism to be used to deny or invalidate votes.
A few days ago there was a long article about South Carolina's Marci Andino, the executive director of the state's Election Commission, whose testimony in federal court exposes the mechanism to be used to deny or invalidate votes.
This isn't about protecting against voter fraud. This is all about taking away the vote from minorities, the poor, and the ill -- taking it away from people who have voted without incident for decades. It's not Andino's fault. She's just the poor bureaucrat left to try to explain the inexplicable: how all of this could come to pass in the United States of America 50 years after passage of the Voting Rights Act.Also, a little history about the Voting Rights Act and the weaselly excuses for the voter ID push. Yes, I said "weaselly," which may be insulting to actual weasels.
Your Labor Day Selections
- Things organized labor pushed to get.
- s. e. smith on labor in general and freelancing in particular:
Today is also a day when I think of the people who are working on Labour Day—those who keep the vital systems we need moving in motion, like doctors and nurses, bus drivers, firefighters. And those who must work because they have no choice, because they cannot afford the time off and they work for workplaces that don’t observe the holiday; restaurant staff, retail clerks, other service workers for whom the calendar never pauses.
And of freelancers, a growing segment of the working population in the United States. 30% of the population is employed in ‘contingent’ labour, either full or part time, and 55% of those people are women. Working as a freelancer is difficult, and the level of difficulty is often wildly underestimated by people who may see it as romantic or fascinating, but not hard. - Letter from an angry white guy, but it's not what you think, via Brilliant at Breakfast.
- How governments spend their money, by Dr. Science at Obsidian Wings. With graphs.
- Where the Polo Grounds used to be.
Sunday, September 2, 2012
Polishing the Cat
Because for some reason or other, Harper's feed now opens in my email, so I have to remember to check it, which means the last time I looked a couple of days ago there were 25 items, I missed the article by Jack Hitt entitled "Obama Derangement Syndrome."
The charge from the other side is that mainstream media outlets have abandoned their duty to check simple, knowable facts. For instance, the GM factory Ryan suggested was closed during the Obama Administration was actually shuttered in December 2008, i.e., during the final months of the Bush Administration. Every outlet, except the most devoted Republican organs, has now reported this. So, there has been a big shift now. Daily political journalists have perhaps heard the message that they are not doing their jobs and feel bad about it.Time for a walk.
That’s one explanation, and possibly it’s the truth. But the Republicans have also succumbed to the Obama equivalent of what Charles Krauthammer called, more than four years ago, Bush Derangement Syndrome. There is no problem of our time that cannot be assigned to some failing in the leadership of Barack Obama.
Barrett Strong, Kander & Ebb, Pink Floyd, and the O'Jays
Via The Sideshow, "Wall Street's War Against the Cities," the effort to bankrupt cities and states in order to pauperize the populace. Excuse me. To drive down wages.
The problem is that the financial system itself is rotten. This has turned today’s class war into a financial war, with the major tactic being to shape how voters perceive the problem. The trick is to make them think that cutting taxes will lower their living costs and make housing cheaper, rather than enabling banks to take what the tax collector used to take. That is the key perception that needs to be spread: cutting taxes leaves more “free lunch” income available for banks to lend against, loading the economy deeper into debt.Please read the whole thing. It's scarier than Freddy Kruger.
Here’s why the present track can’t possibly work. State and local pension funds are $3 trillion behind because they are only making 1% returns these days (the only safe return), not the 8+% that they were told to make in order to pay pensions by “capital” gains (that is, the bank-financed free lunch). The Fed is keeping interest rates low in an attempt to re-inflate real estate and other asset prices back to the happy decade of Bubblemeister Greenspan. If interest rates rise – by enough to enable California, Chicago and other localities to obtain enough interest to pay retirees what they promised – then banks will see the collateral for their mortgage loans fall.
"It'll Cost Ya"
Second verse, same as the first. Mercury Rising:
Really, it's Republican Satanic panic.
ETA: Not only Republican Satanic panic, it would seem that voter fraud is a Republican sport. Bradblog (via skippy):
That’s right, folks: The good folk of Kittson County are being asked by the Minnesota Republican Party to shell out nearly $112 for every man, woman and child in the county, and to pay for something that won’t fight fraud but will make it harder for legal voters like shut-ins, veterans, and college kids to vote.See also the first comment.
Really, it's Republican Satanic panic.
ETA: Not only Republican Satanic panic, it would seem that voter fraud is a Republican sport. Bradblog (via skippy):
Apparently, the only "portion of what happened" that could be "classified as fraud", at this time, was courtesy of Vos' own wife.Amputating a leg to cure a cold?
For the record, it's unclear from the new reports whether Samantha Vos voted in person or via absentee. If by absentee --- the way that voter fraud is usually carried out, in the instances where it occurs --- there is no polling place Photo ID law in the world that would have kept her from doing so. If she voted in person at the polling place, despite having declared herself a resident of Idaho earlier this year, it's likely she still retained an unexpired WI driver's license and so, even under her own husband's strict polling place Photo ID restriction law, likely would have had no problem casting her fraudulent votes this year.
Saturday, September 1, 2012
We Have No Right to Prate About Morality
or: Arthur Silber is right.
No one will be prosecuted for the deaths of prisoners tortured in Iraq and Afghanistan.
No one will be prosecuted for the deaths of prisoners tortured in Iraq and Afghanistan.
These outcomes should once again focus international attention on the Justice Department’s conduct. Mandatory provisions of the Convention Against Torture should have compelled the department to open criminal inquiries into cases in which concrete and credible allegations of torture exist. It failed even to open inquiries in almost all such cases, and in the tiny handful of cases in which inquiries were opened, Justice Department figures were busy murmuring assurances from the outset that these investigations were a mere formality, and that actual prosecutions were unlikely. So did Durham conduct a bona fide investigation? We can never know the answer to that question, because everything that Durham did was cloaked—as proper process in fact requires—in secrecy.
Hello Earth
Via skippy, the reason the Romney/Ryan plan for Medicare is a Very Bad Idea.
Medicare—like other insurers—can keep its costs—and recipients’ costs—low, by having the largest risk pool possible. That is the beauty of a single-payer system, of which Medicare is a highly successful example.We have private insurers currently with regular health care. That's why it's so expensive. Remember?
And that’s precisely where the Ryan/Romney Medicare plan falls on its face. Ryan/Romney turns Medicare into a privatized voucher program. Under the Ryan/Romney plan, Medicare-eligible seniors will be encouraged to seek out private insurers for their “Medicare” plan. Paul Ryan boasts that this is a way to save money. It’s not, and that risk pool deal is the reason.
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