"My hovercraft is full of eels." Political (Monty) Pythonist and baseball fanatic. Other matters as inappropriate.
Thursday, October 31, 2013
Food Stamps
- Republic of T: "47 Million Americans Are Going Over the 'Hunger Cliff.'"
The truth is that sometimes those who work still can’t eat. Many food stamp recipients have jobs. They are the working poor, whose wages are not enough to lift them out of poverty. They are low-wage workers for highly profitable companies that refuse to pay living wages. They rely on food stamps to stave off hunger. Some employers, like McDonald’s tell workers to apply for food stamps if their wages aren’t enough to put food on the table.
These are the people who will be going over the “Hunger Cliff” while members of Congress negotiate even more cuts to food stamps. - Welcome Back to Pottersville: "McHammered."
This cruel brand of wingnuttery (check out the barely literate comments at the end of the article) would drive me crazy even if I wasn't on SNAP myself. Ozimek seems perfectly comfortable with the federal government bailing out bottomlessly avaricious corporations like McDonald's who long ago found a way to game the system and get the American taxpayer to assume much of the burden of their overhead expenses such as payroll and health care. He seems to have not the slightest problem with a person such as Nancy Salgado making minimum wage after a full decade with the company and that company telling her, "Rather than pay you even a penny more an hour, go on public relief."
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Via skippy, Lance Mannion on Edward R. Murrow and the news biz. There were giants in those days. There were non-giants, too.
George Takei speaks at the National Press Club (YouTube video -- speech begins 8 minutes in).
There’s a hint in the movie that TV journalism---all journalism---was what it is today, superficial, process and narrative obsessed, prone to the worship of power and success and the celebrification of the rich and powerful, including and especially Washington politicians, fetishizing “balance” and “objectivity”. Chuck Todd would have been as at home then as he is now, although he might have thought twice before blithely announcing it’s not his job to sort out fact from fiction or determine who’s lying and who’s telling the truth out of fear of what Ed Murrow would think of him. But part of why McCarthy was able to get away with things he did---“I hold in my hand a list…” was that the national press corps practiced the same He Said-She Said journalism that lets Republicans today claim climate change is a hoax, tax cuts pay for themselves, government spending doesn’t create jobs, Obamacare will establish death panels, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera... I learned in a history of journalism course back in college that after the Senate finally censured McCarthy and he crawled all the way into the bottle---one thing is clear in the clips interspersed throughout Good Night, and Good Luck: McCarthy was almost continually drunk---there was some collective soul-searching among journalists and editors that concluded with the self-indictment that “balance” was another name for institutional timidity and for some time after, up to and through the Vietnam War and Watergate, news organizations practiced a more aggressive and investigative brand of reporting. That ended with the election of Ronald Reagan and the realization that there was a large conservative audience waiting to be exploited as a market for advertising.At the daily howler, Mr. Somerby in commenting on a speech by Malala Yousafzai mentions the oppositional tendency of current journalists.
George Takei speaks at the National Press Club (YouTube video -- speech begins 8 minutes in).
Monday, October 28, 2013
Higher Ground
- Falsehoods about Obamacare, take n + 1:
This year the campaign to recast a program that makes health insurance accessible to millions of Americans as a plague of locusts has risen to fever pitch. The Republican Party and conservative media has pulled out all the stops in a strategy aimed at scaring people from signing up with the hope that low enrollment will collapse the system.
Mark Howard at AlterNet, folks. - The 300,000 Floridians; the Blue Cross/Blue Shield CEO corrects the record. Via Zandar Versus The Stupid.
- Driftglass is conducting a fundraiser. Sample post.
- Bob Somerby wonders why baseball games take so long now and invokes the '63 Series and Koufax and Drysdale.
Sunday, October 27, 2013
Friday, October 25, 2013
Hot Fun in the Autumn-time
Well, no; fall is Serious Business. Winter is coming, and those acorns don't get buried by themselves.
- In memoriam: Anthony Caro, abstract sculptor.
- Yves Smith, Naked Capitalism, on "The Coercive Power of Capitalism." Because it's not benign.
And this might put the “failure of capitalism” theme in context. If you have a system that requires that people sell their labor as a condition of survival, yet fails to provide enough opportunities to sell labor to go around, you have conditions for revolt. Hungry, desperate people having nothing to lose. That, and not charity, is the root of the welfare state, to provide a buffer for when the capitalist system chokes up and presumably on a short-term basis, fails to provide enough jobs (that and to provide for people who are infirm, handicapped, or otherwise cannot work, which communities in England did in the early modern era).
Read the rest; it'll straighten your hair.
So you can see the obvious tension: the capitalist classes in America, to increase their riches further, have been squeezing workers harder by not hiring as they did in the past. We’ve never had a “recovery” in the post-WWII era with so little of GDP growth going to labor (meaning both hiring and wage increases). In the past, the average was over 60% and the lowest was 55%. I haven’t seen a recent update, but the last figures I saw was that the level for this “recovery” was under 30%. Yet simultaneously, theres’s a full-bore effort on to gut the remaining safety nets. If this isn’t a prescription for social and political instability, I don’t know what is. - I had thought I'd pointed people at Margaret and Helen's latest. Apparently not. Ableist language. Also, I think it is time for Texas women to rise in revolt. (See note.)
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Obamacare Makes a Difference; That's Why the Fear
- Republic of T on how the Affordable Care Act is already working. (I've seen blustering by Republicans that they'd do the whole thing differently and better. Which of course is why it took how many years? for this version of health care to come about. Pull the other leg, it has bells.)
- That number, again, if you can't reach the ACA website:
1-800-318-2596
- Fibromyalgia cause. (Washington Times article.)
Now it has been discovered when the AV [arterio-venous] shunt is defective in function and interferes with capillary function, muscle and skin tissue cannot get proper nutrition or waste drawn away. Additionally, temperature regulation becomes an issue affecting nerve fibers.
- Now to go and enjoy some oldies. Motown oldies.
Just Listenin' to George Carlin
"The planet isn't going anywhere. We are." -- G. Carlin
Last year, I linked to Sara Robinson's articles at Orcinus analyzing Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America. She wrote essays on three of the four folkways, but she never got around to the fourth one, at least not where I could find it (I searched). [ETA: This post links to those articles.]
This gap has been filled (not by Mrs. Robinson, alas) by Geenius at Wrok, who has a long piece at (I'm sorry) Daily Kos: "E Pluribus Contentio: The Origins (and Dangers) of the Tea Party Shutdown"
One paragraph:
Last year, I linked to Sara Robinson's articles at Orcinus analyzing Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America. She wrote essays on three of the four folkways, but she never got around to the fourth one, at least not where I could find it (I searched). [ETA: This post links to those articles.]
This gap has been filled (not by Mrs. Robinson, alas) by Geenius at Wrok, who has a long piece at (I'm sorry) Daily Kos: "E Pluribus Contentio: The Origins (and Dangers) of the Tea Party Shutdown"
One paragraph:
It ought to be, more than anything else, the concept of pluralism itself -- the idea that people with different traits and different values can and should live together under one system that respects the dignity and rights of all of them and gives every one of them a voice. That's what our Founders envisioned, to the extent that the logic of their times would allow. That's what lured generations of immigrants away from repressive monarchies. That's what inspired dissidents living behind the Iron Curtain and enticed many of them to defect. That's what African Americans marched and often died for during the Civil Rights Era. That's what still draws political refugees seeking asylum. If we can't reestablish a consensus behind pluralism now, America as we know it, understand it and revere it is, for all intents and purposes, over.I think this is either the first or second time I've actually cited the Great Orange Satan. Thanks to supergee on Dreamwidth for the link.
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
And Then the Creature Invaded My Dreams
1-800-318-2596
is the number to call to register by phone if you're having problems with the Affordable Care Act website. Spreading the word from Mercury Rising.- The Pacific Ocean has dead zones. Do not touch anything at the top of the page; if you do, at the moment you can get it back by passing over Front Page.
- Tomorrow the Red Sox and the Cardinals start throwing down for the World Championship. (I'd had hope that the ancient Boston Braves and St. Louis Browns had met back in the distant past, but no, the Browns lost the one Series they were in in '44, and the Braves, who won in 1914, lost in '48.) We shall see.
Monday, October 21, 2013
But I'm Not Vegan!
Chicken. Yes, chicken. Sick-making.
ETA: And Safeway continued to sell contaminated chicken known to be contaminated. (Spocko's Brain. He got firsthand experience.)
Yes, I do prepare chicken correctly. Nevertheless.
ETA: And Safeway continued to sell contaminated chicken known to be contaminated. (Spocko's Brain. He got firsthand experience.)
Yes, I do prepare chicken correctly. Nevertheless.
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Conservatives Hope You Get Sick
- Wired interview with the Director of U. S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
[TRF:] [...] For instance, here’s what we’re responding to right now: An outbreak of Legionella in a residential facility in Alabama. An outbreak of tuberculosis in another state. An investigation of a fatal case of Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever on an American Indian Reservation in Arizona where we’ve been working for two years to control that disease. A serious healthcare-associated infection outbreak in Baltimore. A cluster of infants who have been dying, or getting severely ill, in another part of the country. A cluster of meningitis in a university in the northeast that is going to require a very complicated response. An outbreak of hepatitis B in healthcare.
‘For every day of government shutdown, about one million emails at CDC go unread.’
Every day in this country, there are births and deaths and hospitalizations and surgical procedures and emergency department visits and infections, and HIV and TB, and people who get sick from contaminated foods. For every day that goes by, there’s a less intensive investigation, less effective prevention of situations like this. If I had to use one phrase to describe what’s happening: This is a self-inflicted wound. - Aedes aegypti found in California (vector for yellow fever, dengue fever and West Nile virus).
- Antibiotic-resistant salmonella.
- And
Two Colorado cantaloupe farmers plan to plead guilty under a deal with federal prosecutors in connection with the 2011 listeria outbreak that killed 33 people in the nation's deadliest case of foodborne illness in a quarter century.
Because of course that would never happen.
Eric and Ryan Jensen were charged last month with introducing adulterated food into interstate commerce.
Infection control has a liberal bias.
Maybe It Was Written in COBOL...
Sappho at Noli Irritare Leones on the glitchy health care registration website:
In the meantime, Obamacare is fodder for debate about the merits of government vs. private industry. My own sense of the general issue is that government does some things well, and private industry does other things well. Government does more things well, and private industry more things badly, in my observation, than the strictest libertarian arguments allow for. When I was young, “small government” people had “government shouldn’t legislate morality” arguments for why the free market would do a much better job at ending discrimination than anti-discrimination laws would, but, from where I sit, anti-discrimination laws worked much better for this purpose. Similarly, government does better than private industry at addressing certain externalities like pollution, and providing certain public services where both leaving people uncovered and allowing people to be free riders pose problems (for some things, like fire departments, we can all agree to this, even if we disagree vehemently over how far health care fits this model). On the other hand, I think we pretty much agree that government does less well at central planning than some still hoped it would, when I was young.Large institutional websites take a while to work after launch. Other factors do not help.
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Republicans can say all they want that they are doing what’s best for the country. It feels a lot like revenge, and polls show that Americans are not fooled by Republicans saying otherwise.Republic of T, calling out some liars.
Psychological Reasoning
Humans have a talent for finding enemies, and if they can't find a real one, they'll turn on the nearest innocent bystander not-friend and mock up a monster. Jesse Curtis pegs it:
The far right in American politics is always looking for an enemy that's not there. So they make one up. Having done so, the money flows in, the emotional catharsis is achieved, and they can feel secure in their status as the heirs of 1776.I bear in mind that the "center" and the "right" are in some ways not as far apart as they might look. (As are the "center" and the "left." I am of the "left" because I find the "right" morally, personally, psychologically, and intellectually repellent.)
Monday, October 14, 2013
Hard Truth
Arthur Silber:
[M]ost people do not object to power itself. Most people are enormously comfortable with power, and they are more than happy to obey the dictates of those in positions of authority. Their only requirement is that power be exercised by those they approve and view favorably. It should not be necessary to state explicitly a logically compelled further point. But, since the minds of so many "dissenters" and "radicals" seem to be on extended vacation, it is advisable to set it out: You cannot successfully challenge an enemy by adopting his methods. When you adopt the enemy's methods, you no longer challenge him: you become him. [Emphasis in original.]The essay is about Mr. Greenwald and the Snowden secrets, but that paragraph applies to everyone.
Bit of a Jeremiad
Via Mills River Progressive, Chris Hedges at Truthdig:
I could pick at stuff, but this is prime wailing. The comments are the usual swamp.
In the modern age this toxic, mindless cacophony, our own version of spectacle and gladiator fights, of bread and circus, is pumped into the airwaves in 24-hour cycles. Political life has fused into celebrity worship. Education is primarily vocational. Intellectuals are cast out and despised. Artists cannot make a living. Few people read books. Thought has been banished, especially at universities and colleges, where timid pedants and careerists churn out academic drivel. “Although tyranny, because it needs no consent, may successfully rule over foreign peoples,” Hannah Arendt wrote in “The Origins of Totalitarianism,” “it can stay in power only if it destroys first of all the national institutions of its own people.” And ours have been destroyed.It's one and one-third pages long.
I could pick at stuff, but this is prime wailing. The comments are the usual swamp.
Friday, October 11, 2013
Because Nobody Gets Stalked On Line. Uh-Uh.
Tell me again just how concerned they are about privacy.
(PS: If you ever run across a Facebook account that alleges to be mine, it is fake; I refuse to have a Facebook account.)
(PS: If you ever run across a Facebook account that alleges to be mine, it is fake; I refuse to have a Facebook account.)
Thursday, October 10, 2013
In Memoriam
- Scott Carpenter, astronaut (Mercury 7)
- Stanley Kauffmann, movie critic
- Andy Pafko, Brooklyn Dodger
Conservatives and Republicans So Love the Troops...
Open letter from a veteran on food stamps.
By the way, I found this link on a porn site.
I didn’t risk my life in Afghanistan so I could come back and watch people go hungry in America. I certainly didn’t risk it so *I* could come back and go hungry.
Anyone who genuinely supports cutting food stamps is not an intellectual or an ideologue – they’re a bully.
And nobody likes a bully. Except other bullies.
By the way, I found this link on a porn site.
Tuesday, October 8, 2013
"Saruman the White Has Ever Been Our Friend and Ally"
Thank you, Grima.
More Wormtonguery:
More Wormtonguery:
- April Short at AlterNet asks an obvious question: If the Drug Enforcement Administration is not particularly effective, why wasn't it shut down?
- Two things:
- A suggestion to let the Red States secede from Obamacare (David Morris, AlterNet).
- Ta-Nehisi Coates is not in favor of that.
- Missouri governor about to make anesthesia more expensive.
- And sturgeonslawyer (Dreamwidth and LiveJournal) posts a eulogy for the Republican Party.
Monday, October 7, 2013
Presenting
Video by Senator Bernie Sanders discussing the shutdown. (No transcript, unfortunately.) Six minutes.
It Stood Out
Driftglass:
By now, the life cycle of every GOP crisis --Because we don't get enough Batman references in our political discourse.
-- is such a baseline element of modern American political life that anyone who is actually surprised by any of this, or who continues to drop automatically into a "Both Sides Do It" crouch every time the Penguin figures out some new way [to] threaten Gotham City, should seriously consider having themselves put into a medically induced coma until the Second Coming. [Typo corrections mine.]
- Fling the country into the middle of a manufactured nation-threatening cataclysm for craven, political reasons;
- Publicly shit the bed so hard trying to extricate themselves from their own clever scheme, the sheer force of it lifts them into orbit;
- Frantically scramble around trying to hang the blame for failing to defuse the bomb they built on the same people who [tried] to stop them from building the bomb in the first place
Sunday, October 6, 2013
Here, Have Some Class War
Via Zandar Versus the Stupid, Aimai at No More Mister Nice Blog gets to the core of what the Republicans really want, by way of analogy to the Fine Dining Experience, citing a restaurant owner who ran a service-charge, no-tips restaurant. (Read that whole series of articles if you have the time; it's an amazing peek into a world that everyone [except the people working in it] believes they know about and actually have no clue.)
ETA: At NMMNB, I fell across something called Reading is for Snobs, which has an interesting quote from Marc Thiessen, Republican speechwriter, excerpted from a Washington Post column.
I'd even argue that Reince Priebus's absurd "offer" to pay for a few employees to keep the military site open for the honor flight vets was an example of a perfectly logical extension of the tipping principle: that people with money should get better treatment than ordinary customers. That the government's attempt to treat everyone uniformly in both the Sequester and the Shut Down is, to the Republican way of thinking, a greater affront than almost anything else. It flies in the face of the "do you know who I am?" principle which underlies Republican thinking about the nature of the world.Zandar summarizes it all for you:
So no, the Republicans don't care about furloughed federal workers and their families, because the entire shutdown scenario is nothing more than collective punishment against all the people who voted for Obama. Shutting down the government was the plan all along, as this NY Times article points out.By the way, are you reading Avedon's Sideshow? You should be reading Avedon's Sideshow. Go right now and read Avedon's Sideshow. You can thank me later.
[...]
Make no mistake, this shutdown and the threat of default is collective punishment against those of us who dared to opposed the Way Things Ought To Be. The shutdown is there and the price of that shutdown is the end of the Affordable Care Act. Republicans will destroy our country at this point, and cause trillions in damage and suffering for tens of millions of us in order to get their way.
[...]
We're ten days out from a economic and constitutional crisis, and there's no indication that it will be averted. You, me, and the rest of The Help must be punished, and the Republicans are going to wreck the country in order to do so, then say "We will continue to destroy your family and your economy until you realize that you are beneath us." [Emphasis in original.]
ETA: At NMMNB, I fell across something called Reading is for Snobs, which has an interesting quote from Marc Thiessen, Republican speechwriter, excerpted from a Washington Post column.
Friday, October 4, 2013
Lest We Have Forgotten
The NSA is still out there. How they attacked Tor. (Not the publisher; software for a network enabling on-line anonymity. Originally The Onion Router.)
See? See?
I've been saying for years that conservatives think "Dickensian" is a term of approbation.
Evidence that we are indeed moving toward "Dickensian."
Evidence that we are indeed moving toward "Dickensian."
Cries and Whispers
No, not really.
- In memoriam: Vo Nguyen Giap, general.
- Yes, that is "Radar Love" in the background.
- There's a reason for that elastic cord on your masks: Zandar of Zandar Versus The Stupid caught an exchange between his Senators on strategy on live microphone.
What the Wonder Twins here don't understand is the vast majority of Americans are against the idea of shutting down the government over Obamacare. They think that America is going to blame the Democrats for this for refusing to scrap a law that passed in 2010, was upheld by SCOTUS in 2012, and topped by President Obama's re-election 11 months ago.
Like Team Romney a year ago, these idiots think they've already won. They're completely baffled as to how anyone could side with Obama over this. They think Obama will cave any minute now.
The one person these two morons don't care about? You.
Keep that in mind. - Texas is preventing old ladies from voting. Mmm-hmmmmmmmmmm. Via skippy.
- The playoffs are under way. Oooh, the suspense. (The Cincinnati Reds have already fired Dusty Baker.)
- Redbone (the band) is Chicano/Native American. Never knew that.
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Mostly Current Events
Remember "Current Events," usually discussed in History classes? Does that even happen in school anymore?
- Your Congresscreatures are still getting paid. (Carla Marinucci at SFGate.com, and yes, I noticed that she seems to point more at Democrats than Republicans.)
- Comprehensive piece from Terrance Heath, Republic of T, on the details and effects of the shutdown.
Calling the GOP’s antics childish is an insult to children. [...]
With two kids, sharing and taking turns is mandatory in our house. But it’s not always easy. When there’s trouble, it often involves the television. After playing outside, eating dinner, and finishing homework we let our boys watch some television before bedtime. Since children’s shows are usually half an hour long, every 30 minutes they take turns choosing what to watch.
[...]
Once, our oldest was inconsolable over losing a bit of his television time. I asked him in exasperation ,”Well, what would make you happy?” He responded, “A thousand turns!”
I thought about that exchange when House Republicans sent the Senate a continuing resolution tying government funding to delaying or defunding the Affordable Care Act. It came to mind again when GOP concocted an even more ludicrous list of demands for raising the debt ceiling. The difference is that our son stopped his grumbling and pouting, because he knew that he was demanding what he’d never get.[Emphasis added] - Margaret and Helen. With a history lesson.
- Comrade Misfit calls excrement on the Tea Party and conservatives.
Providing a national version of Romneycare is, according to them, the clearest and presentist danger to the Republic that has ever existed.*
You know why, of course.
Yet when clear evidence is presented to them of Federal government intrusion: Tracking what people do online, who they talk to on their phones and what they talk about, what they purchase with their credit/debit cards and where they are, well, all you hear from the Right is silence.
Tuesday, October 1, 2013
Why I Love Margaret and Helen, Part n
If brains were leather, Cruz wouldn’t have enough to saddle a junebug.There is, of course, more.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)